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Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Fridly,Aprll2~,1998

Foxglove:An old- fashion
. f19wer for today's garden

'My Fair Lady'

The Cino i d Enquirer
If you are foro of old-fashioned
flowers, plant a few foxgloves (DigiuiliS
~). They have survived in ~
gardens;praaically unchanged, f!l' hwldRds of years.
·
Alice Coa!es, an authOOty on the his-.
tel'Y of flowers, tl'llres the flower's fanciful and poelic name to the Anglo-Saxon·
phrase fox gleow, a g)eow being a musical inswment that consists of a row of
bells hung on an .-ch. Fox may be a
ruption of "folks,• aref~ to the lit~
tie people or fairies. "Glove" refers to
the similarity between the long 1Ubulal'
flowers and the Qngers.of a glove.
If this isn't to your liking, you can fall
back on the common names of ''Witclles-thimble" or .. Bloody man's fingers... ·
Or you may prefer the bolanical 118111(\
digitalis. which means "o[a finger."
The common foxglove is by nature
biennial; althoqgh it _will occasionally
bloom ihe first year, and if it likes the
spot where it is growing it will self-sow
and 'persist as a perennial. The foliage
appears as a large rosene, bold and lush,
deep green, 'wrinkled and, slightly hail)',
The flower stalk is elegant and appears
· in early summer, crealing a wonderful
·. venical accent in a flower bed or border.
The foxglove will fkui!h in shady
spots, among the roots of trees, for
example, where Olher plants will not survive. A rich, woodsy soil with lots of
compost is ideal. Bll they &lt;bl't require
·sliai:, and an cpll1 sunny bed is fine as

will be staged
at Rio Grande
-SeeC1

'

Major league basebaU • Sports on B1
50 yearS in bUSineSS e Featured on 01

..

tmes·
•
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

a

. ,

,

I

.

That's a spiritual crisis, according "Why?"
to a new awareness among grief
It's an emotional question that
experts.
doesn't allow for a satisfying ratio"It's so true, having a major loss nal answer. But. as Pope John Paul
does impact our spiritual belief sys- has said, modern Americans lack a
tern, " says Denise Stone, grief sup- · "theology suftering" to comfort
port coordinator for Wuesthoff Bre- them amidst grief.
vard Hospice in Brevard County,
"In the Middle Ages, the horrenFla. "It pull~ the rug right out from dous death was to die quickly,
under you and leaves you saying, because you were unprepared. for
'Wail a minute, I have to check this. death," Doka says. Suffering I believed this and this and so and physical or emotional ·- had meanso, and now I'm not so sure.' "
ing. "It made sense. ·In that retribuWhether facing their own death, tive theology, it weighed against
or the death of a loved one, most what you owed.''
people experience the five stages ·of
Modern people more 'often congrief describe~ by psychiatrist Elisa- elude that, like the biblical Job,
beth Kubler-Ross. a pioneer in death "you can't comprehend" why you
and dying i~&lt;ues: denial, anger, bar- or another per.on has to die.
gaining, sadness and acceptance.
"ICs like exp)aining nucleOli
To those, Doka adds what he calls physics to a cat," Doka says. "It gets
a crucial step: spiritual reconcilia- you nowhere, :and it ultimately
tion.
annoys the cat."
"Sometimes when a loss occurs.
Another stage of grieving is findwe experience a deep secondary loss ing one's definition of ilnmonality.
of our spiritual basis," says Doka, which ·may be traditional Western
who differentiates that from rcli- theo!ogy- or·might embrace Eastgion. "Spirituality is a transcenden- em thoughts of reincarnation and
tal• belief system through which we nirvana. But Doka cites many more
II)' to explain life. "
ways people seek immortality.,
:rherefore, when a death chal"It can be biological , where one
lenges a person 's ~hilosophical lives on through one's descendants.
framework, "reconstructing mean- Or creative: A person lives on
ing becomes a task, to understand through what he or she had done in
how a loss has torn apan meaning," life."
he says.
·
Others believe they ach.ieve
One of the first responses people ·immortality through "eternal
have when facing death- their own nature,'" the fact that their bodies
or a loved one's - is the question become . part of Earth's natural

cycles. And some people consider and can be helped with 'little more
organ donation a way to live on than a visit with ~ .grief support
beyond their own physical death.
counselor. Or,. they may gain suffiGrappling with such spiritual cient comfort from family,' friends
concepts is a normal pan of the and rituals associated with death,
grievi~g process, says Doka. · such as funerals or memorial ..,.._
According to th~ Association for 'vices .
Death Education and Counseling
Other people create their own rit(ADEC) most . people experience uals- powerful tools for helping to
grief normally. llut sometimes psy- ease grief. Planning a ritual helps the
chological complications call for grieving person to focus his or 'her
continuing help from ·a grief coun- thinking. The ritual itself gives peoselor or support group.
pie license to vent their emotions.
Also . potentially complicated
· The best rituals also give grieving
grief situations are multiple deaths, a sense of releasing the person ·
successive deaths, and those with they've lost, and provide 'spiritual
second31)' losses resulting from the . suppon by reiteratin,: one'sphilosudeath, such as loss of one's home or phy or faith "because they hit us at
circle of friends.
the threshold of consciousness, the
But most people - between 60 liminal level right above sublimiand 80 percent, according to ADEC nal,'" Doka says.
- experienc~ uncomplicated grief
with the healthiest

$5,950.

can visit the auditor's office for information.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH ·
Asked about pa•t reappraisals and the effect on tax bills, Denver Warn- ·
Tlmea-Sentlnel Stan
er.
who has been doing appraisal work for the county sonce the 1970s, s.a1d
POMEROY- Reupprnisal of Meigs County's 2s:ooo pieces of real estate
r~ nearing completion now. bur propef!y owners won't kno:-v the real effect that a' far a• he knows, "taxes have never gone down in a reapproisul. they've
always gone up."
.
of the value changes on their taxes until Janu31)'.
.
'
The
county
is
required
to
do
reappraisals
of
each piece of prbpeny evel)'
.
• That's when bills for lhe tirsl half.Qf 1997- figured on the baSJs of the
six
years.
Since
no
individual
or
local
firm
is
certified
to handle tlrat size of
new apprnisal ftgures and a pro~rty sales analy~is made by the state - lire
job, the auditor said a contract was awarded to Apprnisal Research. ·
mailed out.
'
'
·
Once the figures are in from the appraisal company, then they still have
Whetl)er the reappraisal will result in on incre.~se or a decrease. in 'axes
to
be
approved by lhe state which makes the final determination o~ true val.will depend on the updated property values, ac;cordt~g to C&lt;J?nly Audrtor Nanue.
explained
Warner. He said that again in three years the state wtll update
cy Parker Campbell. Those value figures wll.l no1 be avoolable unt1l somethe figures.
.
time in the fall. she said.
The reappraisal and the probability it will increase ta)\es, along with the
• J " •"'•~l)'lhing is complete and the values are set. lheh Campbell said
' \;~~'lltltertise that fact in the newspaper so thai property owners who . levies to be voted on in May. have raised concerns of some property own(Contlnued on AS)
choose to know about their taxes in advance of the January tax statements

.

ing process ·are those who have th.l:
most opponunity to talk with family,
friends, clergy or a counselor, ·says
Doka.
Bwt thcie's no such thing as "getting over" one 's grief. There's only .
what Doka·calls "amelioration;. a slow but ste,dy improveme~t..
"Grief is vel)', vel)' hard work,"
and it is a v~ry ind.vidualized
process, say's Doka. "Avoid prescription, and avoid people who give.
prescriptions.''
Research indicates most people
experience an active grieving
process for up to five years, according to ADEC.
"Never give yourself the message that your time is up for grieving," says Doka.· "The end of grief
is not. the end of memory. It is when
we can 'rerr1emberwitt1out

Sfi' 950

Mi Mill Plllllr

:News Watch
Issue 2's impact
·on sales vexes
prpfessor at'OU

8,950

Slack Nunbor 1Ttt4'AA
Wilrbnotor:b •

•

Portland Ciu-olyn McPherson;
Shade-- William C. Cvok; Rutland- Debbie Brown. Kendall Brown,.
Marcia Elliott, JoAnn Eads, Marta
Blackwood, Larry "Edwards and
Donna Davidson; Langsville -Kimberly Argabright and Joseph
Argabright; West Columbia -Cheryl Clark; Mason -- Charlotte
Thompson, Misty Grogan; Gallipolis -- Vicky Brown; Cheshire -Selby Manley.
Retired and Senior Volunteer
Program workers assisting the
Bloodmobile were: Helen Bodimer.
Katie Cr.ist. Peggy Harris, Betty
Spencer, June Ashley, Jane Brown,
Sampson Hall and Ted Hatfield. The
canteen was served by the Middleport Conservation League.
The next scheduled visit fonhe
Red Cross Bloodmobile at the .
Senior Citizens Cenler in Pomeroy
· will be June· 17. 1-6 p.m.
. J

'

10,950 10,950 SJ0;9SO SJ.0,950
5

5

1!17 Niall SnllllE
SIJCir tt.mblfnilmii

Column s

,

1997 Cltefy Lumina Sedan
•3100 V-6 Power
• TiWCruise

• AMIFM Stereo

• Well Equi~l

• Power Wintlow$/locks
• Fuly Loaded!

.. .

Easy brownies make great family treats
By The Associated Press
Yes. we have brownies for you
when you use this One-Bowl Brownies recipe with its creamy frosting.
One-Bowl BroWIIMs
4 squares ·unsweetened baking
chocolate
3/4 cup (I 112 sticks) butter or margarine
2 cups sugar
3 eggs
I teaspoon vanilla
I cup flour
I cup c!)arsety chopped nuts
(optional)
White Chocolate Coconut Frosting
(recipe follows)
Heat oven to.350 F (325 f. for glass
baking dish). Line 13- by 9-inch baking pan with foil extending over edges
to use as handles. Grease foil:
Meh chocolate and buner in heavy
saucepan (about I .quan size) over
very low heat, stirring constandy, The
chocolate will melt more easily if it is
I

chopped into small pieces. OR:
M1crowave chocolate and butter in
large microwavable bowl on high 2
minutes or until butter js melted. Stir
until chocolate is ~ornpletely melted.
Stir sugar into chocolate'until'well
blended. Mix in eggs and vanilla. Stir
in llour and· nuts until well blended.
Spre!!d in prepared pan.
Bake 30 to 35 minutes or until
toothpick insened in center comes out
with.fudgy crumbs- take care not to
overbake. Cool in pan. Run knife
around edge of pan to loosen brownies
from sides. Using foil as handles, lift
brownies from pan onto cutting board.
Frost with White Chocolate
Coconut Frosting. Refrigerate brownies I0 minutes to set frosting. Cut into
squares or cut with cookie cutters into
Easter shaj!es; such as bunnies. (Pre$S
cutter down into·brownies to cut; then
lift up and push the bro)Nnie up
t,hrough the cutter unemove.)
DecorJite with deoorating materi-

als, including· icings, glossy gels and
tiny omamenll!l candy ~s (deCo- •
_ rnling tips he low). . _
. Makes 24 brownie squares, or
. about 10 brownie cutouts:

)4,950.

5

White Chocolale Coconut Frost·

ing

·
I stick softened butter
I cup powdered sugar
2 tablespoons milk
3 squares mel!ed white baking
·chocolate
7-ounce bag (I 113 cups) sweetened flaked COCOnUI
· Beat butter, sugar and milk in'
medium bowl with elecllic ·mixer on
low speed until blended. Beat on
'medium speed until smooth. Beai in
melted chocoli11e. 'Stir in half of
coconut.
Sprinkle remaining coconut over .
brownies after they are frosted and : '
cut, if desired.

SJ'
J
95D•r..·'

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6To Choose From!

1997 Clevy Blazer 4U011r 4x4

15,9'50

5

• LS Pacltage · .
• A1t1riun Wh aals
• VOIIIc OlD V-6 Powar. . • Fuly Loadidl

I'

GALLIPOLIS- An Ohio VaUey
Publishing ·co. editorial staiTer ha~
won first place in a calegol)' of the
~ssociated Press Society of Ohio
Newspaper Awards contest.
,
· Jill Williams of· t,he Gallipolis
·Daily Trt"bune won·the lOp ~n~ in
the features category of DJVJSIOO I
, newspaperS for her Sunday 1ime~'
·Sentinel feature. "Lighls. Carneru.
Drjve-ln.'' published J.une 29. 1997.
· The fl:aiUre focu!led on lhe expe·
'rience of viewing movies allhe drive..in, a disappearina aspecl or popular culture thai nevertheless remains
'alive and well locally lhrouah the
Kanaup Drive-in, in nillence si-

. . ;·-----...:.--..1

.,_ •llltr.o_. _ _ .,..,............................. _ _ _

r' ,..______________...,""""_____

.

.,......It:

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis will be looking for a new city man·

agar.

.

On Friday, the Gallipolis City Commission aaked John K.
LeBlanc, who has served as city manager since July 1, 1997,
to step down.
· .
·
LeBlanc told the Times-Sentinel Saturday, "I received no
backing from this commission and was limply aaked to
resign." He said !'IO other reasons were given.
· CommlssiCiner Herman Koby ·said, ''Things juat weren't
working out, !hal's all." Commisslon!lf Dr. Gene Abllla agreed
wheri contacted by the Times-Sentinel. Atte'"pta tCI reach oth·
er comnilssloners for comment Satt,rrday were unsucceaaful •
The commissioners will formally accept LeBlanc'• reaig·natlon In a special meeting In the city manager's office at 8
a.m. Monday.

- .The way it once was...-

Studenta from Waahlngton Elementary School In Gal- .
llpolla watched •• Dan Hinton
of Waterlown, OhiCI, wCirked
at his craft •• a blackamlth,
above, It the Federal Army
Homecoming, continuing thla
weekend It the Gallipolla City
Park until 4 p.m. Sunday. At
right, battle technique• and
weapon• were explained by a
fec:Jeral aoldler re-enactor.
Schoolchildren to11rec:! the
camp on Friday and received
living blatclry lelaona from
re-enactCira. The annual
event. A hoSt or other eventa, .
ranging from a program on
Civil War mec:Jiclne at the
Ariel Theatre to artillery
dlmonatratlona and a presentation on the Under·
ground Railroad, are round·

lng out the gathering of reenar;tors, one of Gallia Coun-

'

· Commissioners announced plans to
By BRIAN J. REED
S«k or pmvilk linandal assistance to
Times-Sentinel Stan
· TUPPERS PLAINS- Residents elderly residents. as well as those
seeking financial assistan~e in con- who ')Ualify as lnw and moderatenecting lo the Tuppers Plains Region- income households. with the costs
at· Sewer System have been gr.tnted assnc'ialed in connecting their homes
to sewer laps and those costs
an e)OJCnsion.
Wist momh. the Meigs County involved in disconnecting and crush-

ty'a first major tourlam IMit ttl
of the year.
·

ing eKisting septic tanks.
According to Jean Trussell. the
county's grants administmtor. the
applications are actually income surveys wilh cost estimates. No funding
source has been found for the work.
The 'commissioners have extendeJ the application deadline for anoth-

'

ertwo weeks. Trussell will meet with
residentS&lt;IR Friday. May I fmm 1-4
p.m. at the firehouse in Tuppers
Plains to distribute applicat ions and
answer 4ucstions. and will accept
applications by mail or through· the .

commissioners' nftk:e.

The Environmental Protection

Agency re4uires homeowners to
pump their old septic tanks. till them
with inert material and crush and cover them so they are unusahle. according to Trussell .
The sewer districl ha)ro, obtainetl
J!,ranl and ln;;m fund!~. In linance th~

(Continued on A8)

·Touting home ·upkeep:
Lawnmower repairmen agree simple
· maintenance s•ems engine problems

JHIWIIIIIma
c:a~eaory of the divi1ion were submilled by the Bucyrus Telearaph-

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
RACINE - While most people
are busy mowing their lawns. others
are hustling to repair those mowers
that invariably fail to start. making
spfingtime an ene!JletiC: time for
small engine repain'neq.
''l'm very busy this time of year."
said Lyle Baker. owner of the Racine
Mower Clinic, who explained he is
running ·anywherc from a week to 10
days behind in his repair IIChedille.
Dave WDitcman. owner of Dave's
Small Engine Repair,' Pomeroy,
apeed thai springtime is the busiest

lime. .

"The bisgesl problem is they wait
until they need them. then they covWilliams. who has been with the. Forum and the Circleville Henlld.
er you up, • he added. "They wanl
Williams· fealure wu one of 360 them the same day they bring them
OVPsince AUIIIII 1995. will receive
enuiti
from 21 newiPIPcl'l in ~vi­ up."
tier awird 11 a June 1-4 ceremony in
.
lion
I
done
durinJ 1997 lhll were
· Columbus. The Unlveniry of Rio
Baker and WDitcmah both asreed
Grande
coven the police iudaed ~ ediKne 111t Daily MObn- lhll December and·Januuy are senand counhouie beat fll' lhe Tribune ISin f.alle bf Jasper, AIL Overall, ?J enlly the slowest months fqr small
Ohio newaplpCrs served by lhe AP engine repairmen. particularly durina
and Sunday nrnes-Sentlnel.
• AP's Division I includod dlily submilled entries IIIIo competilion. 1 winters like the recent one wilh little
The Ohio AP annou~d the , snow. me111ina no broken dow.n
newspapers with circ:uluion of 8,000
awards on friday.
Of leu. Other winners in lhe features
•

1950.

4'l5South0turd!Strect· Rlpk:y. WV 1-iKXHI2204f7 ·:J12-JI44
t'r1t117 I I&amp;· tO pa •llttlny 8 I&amp;· MIIIIJP&amp; •IIMJ I pa ·II pa

M
M
C5
BS
C7

LeBlanc to ·resign
as city manager

Residents obtain extension. on TP sewer financial help

AP awards
ov·p staffer,
in contest

12To Choose From!

19Y7 Geo'PriZII
• Automatic
•I« Conditioni'll

,

.

15 To Choose From!

Jack Anderson
BohWmty
Max 'Dnrney
Sam WIIIOII
Jim Sepd1

Vol. 33, No. 11 .

at ·district contest

Good Morning

Bloodmobile collects 71 units during·Meigs·visit
Meigs County residents donated Raymind Landers, Deborah Folmer,
71 units of blood when the Red Gretchen Anderson, Timothy Hall.
Cross Bloodmobile visited the B~rbara K. Matthews Crow,
Meigs County Senior Citizens Ccn- 'Michele Ramsburg, Wilma Man~­
tcr on April 15.
field. ~aurcen Hennc.scy, Adam
Multiple gallon donors were: Jenkins and Vicki Canan;
Henry Bahr. 14 gallons; Debra
Racine -- Sara Ervin, Charles I.
Mora. eight gallons; Timothy Hall. Mugragc, Evelyn Mugragc. Harl)'
two gallons; Donna Davidson. 13 Holter, llarry .Brown. Patty Young.
gallons ; Judith Hunter, 10 gallons ; . Patsy Cornell. Stacey Shank, MariDarl&lt;~ Thomas, five gallons. and · lyn Bogard, Elizabeth Ayres Thornen and Bridget Ritchie; '
. Patricia Young. one gallon.
First time donors were Raymond
Middleport -- Cindi D. Stewan;
Landers. Charlotte Thompson, · Patricia A. Lyons., Vanessa A.
Misty Grogan, Vicky Brown. Larry Compston, Ellis Myers, 'Jennifer A.
Edwards, Sara Ervin and · Adam Garey, Dinah Stewart, Donna HawJenkins.
ley, Patricia Logan, Norma Wilcox.
Donors by community were:
Frank Herald. Elaine Ralston, Judith
Pomeroy -- Jackie Hildebrand. Hunter;
Debr-a D. Mora, Thomas B. Hart,
Tuppen Plains -- Karolyn K.
Janet K. Peavley, Patricia J. Barton, Welsh; Minersville -- Mary L. Voss;
David King, Jane Walton, ·Barbara Reedsville -- Johnny Roush; Syra:
Smith, Carrie Kennedy, John W. cuse -- Vicki Morrow, Carolyn
Moore, Daniel Lantz. Gerald E. Charles. · Bobby Ord and Darla
Rought, Albert Parker, Paul Marr. Thomas; Long Bottom -- Henry
Niese! Gerard, Bethany Cremeans, Bahr; ·

Key Clu·b makes
.sweep of awards

• .COLUMBUS CAP) - 'A penny
may n01 sound like much, but tack
h·onto the state sales tax for every
dollar spent and it could add up to
By JENNIFER RICHTER
what we -have done;· said Shelton.
billion in lost business for
Tlmea..S.nt!nel Stan
"We didn't have hours of hard work.
1ymv retailers. warns a conservaGALLI POLl$ -In the past three we had thousands. All the hard work ·
tive university economics profes- ·years, the Gallia Academy High they did truly paid off." ·.
sor.
.
School Key Club has been succe~~The single service project that the
Ohio University Profe~sor ful at receiving Key Club state bon- Key Club wa~ awarded a trophy for
Richard Vedder studied the potenors for commuriity service projects. was its ToyTown Plus communiiy
tial economic fallout if v01ers on . but when the club entered this year. service project. This ChristmaHime
~~;~:;;:.2w; it 801 ·more th'an.it barJiWred for at the· )l!'Oject besan .in·the fall with distrilidlstrict convention.
ution ihe week. prior to; Christmas.
percent to 6 percent.
. The ,GAHS Key Club entered
Clothes. toys and food were dis€ouplecl with county sales taxseveral of ils project reports to the tribuled.to the less fortunate in Gal·
es of O.S percent to 2 percent. a
districC awards ,ceremony held in lia Couniy. The club supplied fami·pm,:ent state soles to~ would send early April. butliule did they know lies. 'shelters and food pantries with
Ohro shoppers stream tog across the
what the end ·resull of their entries over 15 tons of food and over 1000
bord.er into neighboring states that
~ld he ~ a full ·sweep of the children received special gifts.
have much lower sales taKes. Vedaward.,. ·
During its application process for
lkr told i'eJ10rters Friday.
"Winning one t~ing· for lhe pa't the single service award.the cl~b had
two years wa• great. but winning to write up lhe need. plan. implethree and sweeping the awards was mentation, final results and pub.lic
just awesome." said advisor Barb awareness for its project. Also includShelton. "It made me proud of the ed in its application were phQ\os. live
people 1 work with. they are the best television and radio broadcasts and
Today'a c-.~~bcel al Galli a Academy...
newspaper clippings.
14 Sections • 156 Pqes
"What can you say.'? They have
The overall award required the
done it all. they are the best.'' said club to complete· a . recoll!.mended
GAHS Principal · Bruce Wilson. nine community service activities
Calendu ·
'1'hey lr.tve worked hard and l··am . throughout the year. The club not
. proud of them.''
only completed nine but also did
GAHS journeyed back from the ~yond lhe recommended amount.
Ohio District 49th Annual Key. Club
These activities included helping
Convention with first place honors in the American Cancer Society. Head
the single service. ovemll achieve- Start. Children·s Home. Keep Gallia
'ment and oratorical categories. ·
Beautiful. Iodine Deticiency DisorWeather
A2
"We set: all the re&lt;:ords. I don't der. ToyTown Plus. Ariel Theater.
think statewide any club has done
(Continued on A8)

5
·

.

Gallipolis • Middleport· Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant· April 26, 1998

Property reappraisal in Meigs
County is nearing completion

The sp~ritual connections·in learning to grieve
By RITA ELKINS
Florida Today
Woody Allen once said, "I don't
mind dying; I just don't want to be
there when it happens."
For those who haven 't figured
out how to do that, there are experts .
like Or. Kenneth Doka, an
author/lecturer on death and grief,
who 'has his own witticisms such as
this rule: "No one has to die in a
state of psychoanalytic grace (with)
all their loose.ends tied up."
.
OK, not exactly a knee-slapper.
B.ut consider how many people died
in this country last year.
And you· weren't one of them.
Everyone wants to live forever
and believe that tragedy and mortality happen to other people. But by
midlife - between ·the ages of 30
· and 50 - :·adults have to struggle
with the awareness of mortality,"
Doka says.
With half the nation facing age.50
or above in the next decad~ . there's
an increased interest in spiritual
books, lectures and videos about
death and afterlife. Boomers are facing the no-escape nature of life and
loss. says Doka.
"First, our parents die," he ~ays .
"Secondly, as one ages. one experiences physical declines. And, finally, friends die .- not (suddenly) )Jut
of degenerative conditions. Then
comes the awareness of finitude:
Not only. 'I can die,' but 'I cari die at
any time now.' "

Details on
pageA2

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STARS HONORED- Seniora Teaching and Reaching Students (STARS),_a program which places aal\ior citizens in public schools as mentora and tutors, has10 partici:
pants at the Pomeroy Elementary School, one of only 15 schools In the state selected to take pert In the program.
.
Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister, left, spoke to stUdents Wednesday at a ceremony recognizing the local STARS volunteers, who were chosen to CCimplementthe nHda of the
school's students. Judith Brachman, Ohio Department of Aging dlrec1or, conducted the ceremony. STARS honored, along with state and regional aging agency officials pictured here left to right are, front, Helen Frank, Lois Hawley, Margaret Wyatt, Ellen Johnson, Belly Curfman, Dorothy Janey, Ethel Wolf, and Lorene Goggins; and back'row,
are Madgle Smith and Joanna Council, STARS, with Brach man, Diana Coates, RSVP coordinator, Meigs County Council on Agln!!; Lt. Governor Hollister· ·Jeanne Naguckl
area coordinator of STARS, Pomeroy School Principal Debbie Haptonsllll; and Susan Oliver, Meigs County Council on Aging director.
'
'

Hl70
LOW 50s

snowblol!(ers.
And w,Cn it comes to making sure
your mower starts in lhe spring, the
~painnen agree: fuel additives are
lhe key. .
Sam Combs. a Wheelhorse tech·
nicitin at Baum's Lumber in Chester. ·
·recommemb a comprehensive maintena111.-c: schedule to keep mowers in
· lip-top condition. Althoogh he work.~
only on Wheelhoise mowers. ~said
his maintenance lips would apply to
:any mower or lawn tmctor.
In addition to recommending a
fuel additive be added for storage
during winter. he also suggests the
~~ne be started a few times during
t~e. winter and discournges jleople
against storing their mowers·withoul
fuel.
In lhe fall, don't run lhe carburetors dl)' before storiniJ the mowet for
the winter. said Baker. Use a 11a~
addili ve instead; running t~ carbuRtor dry causes parts lns.ide to dry
and crack. and eventually fail.
But if you really want to visit the
repair shop, the repairmen say don't

.J '

·
TIME - Lyle Baker, owner of lha Racine Mower CHnlc,
tlhown bare working on a weed trlmJMr, aap springtime Ia hla
bualelt time of lha year.
change yopr ~ngine oil or air filters. run wide open," Combs said. "They
don't sharpen your cutting blade.' and · run best at a certain RPM; running al
don'l run your mower's engine at full a slower •peed causes Clllbon lo build
up on the c;ylinders."
lhrotlle.
•
"When the engine nons wide open
Some ~le run their mowers at
less than full throtlle, thinking they . il pulls more air through the "rrouds.
keeping the engine cooler," II(; said,
t~M.extending the life of the engine.
"Run the throttle wide open," adding, "Don't run the engine wi •
Baker advi11es. "for maximum horse· out the shroud~."
Another way to en!IU!e your mowpower and maJ(imum cooling.''
"Mower engines are de•igned to
(Continuecl on AI)

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•

;P;•ge:;;A;2~·~,;•;n;bq~C;il;n•;•;-,;na;;md~~~~~~~~P;om;;e~ro~y~·~M;l;d;dl;e~po~rt~·~G;•;II;Ipo;;lls;,~~~H~·~P;ol;n~t~P;Ie;a;sa;n;t~,WV~~~~~~~~~~~~~S~u~n~d~a~y~,A~pri~J~26~.'~1998~·
Sunday, April 26
AccuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

JMansfield Js2' I•

By LAURAN 'NEERGAARD
AP Medical Wrltar
WASHINGTON - The Justice
Depanmenl has begun an anlilrust
invesligation of the American Red
Cross centered on its exclusive contl"dCI 10. sell a possible new blood·
scrubbing technology. The Associated Press has learned.
Competitors fear thai if the Red
Cross controls the new technology
for scrubbing lh~ AIDS and certain
orher viruses out of plasma. some of
!he smaller banks thai provide half
rhe narion"s blood could be forced our
of business.
The narion's blood supply Jready
is very safe. expens stress, because of
numerous tests for infeclion. Bul scienlists have beeri hunting ways to
make it even safer. avoiding even the
occasional infection that now slips
through.
The milirary considered this new
scrubbed blood. called SD plasma.
enough of an advantage thai il put an
ahemative improved blood program

Youngstown

I~

rn

•lcotumbusls4'

I

~
' '''
\

W.VA.
KY.

4.~ .Q~QQ ~ ~
Showers T·slorms Rain

Flu.rries

S~o-~

fee

u

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Via Associated Press Grapf!JcsNet

Rainy end to weekend ,
slated for southern Ohio
By The As19Ciated Press
.
Occasional rain and a chance of thunder.&lt;torms expecred across Ohio on
Sunday. Highs will vary from the lower 50s far nonh to the mid-60s far south.
Showers expected in the far south Sunday night. with a chance of showers in the nonh. A chance of lingering showers will remain in the far south
Monday with the res! of lhe state remaining dry. Highs will be in the 50s.
Sunrise Sunday will be at 6:38a.m .. ..yhile sunset will be al 8:20p.m.
Weather forecast:
Sunday... Showers and lhunderstorms likely. Highs trom the upper 60s lo
near 70. Chance of rain 60 percen"t
Sunday night.. Mosely cloudy with a chance of sho~ers or thundersrorms.
· Lows in !he upper 40s.
Monday... Moslly cloudy with a chance of showers arid thundersrorms.
Highs near 70.
·
Extended forecast: .
Tuesday... Panly cloudy. Lows in !he mid 40s and highs near 70.
Wednesday...Mostly clear. Lows in !he upper 40s and highs in !he lower
70s.
·

Voinovich, De Wine split
over test standard for DUI
By KATHERINE RIZZO
Friday, DeWine rook ro rhe Senare
Associated Press Wrher
floor to discuss, among other things,
WASHINGTON
George rhe .08 pen:enl blood-alcohol lanVoinovich has loyallies on both sides guage thai now· appears to be in leg·
of Congress· current debate over islarive jeopardy.
drunken driving slandards.
DeWine was one of the driving
As governor of Ohio, Volnuvich is forces behind gelling that language
enrhusiaslically for a .08 percenl through the-Senare.
ljlood-alcohol slandard. Bur if vo1e111
He condemned the groups thai
Sc:nd the Republican ro rhe Senate. successfully blocked it in !he House
·Voinovich said he would nor vote for for what he called ··a well-financed
·incentives or sanctions inrended 10 campaign of half-trulhs;" and vowed
1!foduce ~ unifotm .08 percen1 slall-- • no! 10 slop lrying 10 enacl a .08 perdard nationwide.
ceni srandard inlo federal law.
: "lrhink .08 is a good idea burl
"This legislalion will · no! · go
~on"l think it oughl to be manda!ed ' away;• DeWin!! noted. "Precious
()UI of Washington." he Sllicf whih: in
lives depend on keeping impaired dri·
Washington on Friday.
vers off our roads."
L It is a queslion of philosophy. and
"The facls are on our side,.,. he
Yuinovich said he in rend• lo stick said. "America needs !his legislation
wilh his longbeld belief thai a lot of and I will make sure we keep relum·
!he power of governing should ing to this issue unril we gcrrhe job
~main wilh !he slates.
done.··
· His p()silion on lhe .08 percenl
If DeWine and his like-minded
standard puis Voinovich at odds with colleagues fail to gel !he job done this ·
his ally and fonner lieu1enan1 gover- year. Ihal could mean a srandoff with
nor. Sen. Mike DeWine. R-Ohio.
Voinovich. who at this srage of rhe
Just hours af1er the govemor made political year is !he clear front-runner
his comments to -Ohio reponers on for Glenn's Senale seat

•

Puhli sh~d ~Kh

Sunday. K2~ Thud Avr ~
OallipoliJ. Ohio. by I he Otno Valley Publ•shiflg
Cl'lmpany/Ganndl Co.. Sc:con4 dau JXHI•JC
ptid .11 011llipqlls, OhJO 4~bJ.l . Ernereil u
ICCA'Ind cl.ut matlinJ tl).ltltr al Pomtray. Ohio.

l'osl omcr.

Mf•brr. The

A.noc;ial~rd

Prcu , ;. nd 1be Ot.io

Ncwspaptr Asloclalion.
SUNDAY ONLY
SUISCIIImON RATE.~
1r Owrllror Matar Rate

Ont -~................................................. .St .25

&lt;&gt;ne Ye11t -·~-----·-··---···········-····· ·······---·W-111•
SINCL£ COPY PRICE
511...y ..................................................... SI.Illl
No sut.KripliOflf by m•il pe•miued ill anN
whtK morat carrier lrrlicc il available.

Tk Suadl)' Timu-Scnlincl will lOt rte respon-.
libfe f« -..arKX pay me•~ nude"' anien.

P\lbliJM:r mcr.-eJ the ris•t KJo ldjlll4 ra1e1 duf.
in1 lk ..Mtriptiorl period. SubxriP'ion rift
,lunpt may bC' i.rnenled try clt••li"l ,the
dlaralioll ol the s~ion.

...., .... _,

IIIAILJUIISCIUrrNINS

c.o..,

· ;ll "'=tU .........
.......Collo
,_,__ ,.. ,.....- ......... - ...$27..10

--···································-····"J-"2
-,u.z .........................................
JIIl!.!6

--c..c-,

Jl ~-~-·--·-----..-r---··-·--·--·.$29-:ZS

36 ~~---·············-·········· ·-----..·······""-""

n-"'······················-······-····"····••~.n

..

on hold 10 awail it. Thus. rhe Penta- believe rhis improved produce will be
gon was ~pset when manufacturer of great benefit to everyone."
Vitex suddenly informed officials of
Some scienrists aren "t even sure
its deallo sell only lo !he Red Cross. the technology is wonh all the fuss .
''I a111 extremely concerned that
The Food and Drug Adminisrrathis exclusive agreemenl with !he lion has nol yet approved SD plasma.
(American Red Cross) provides them privarely saying it is not such a lifewith a In
saving producl "thar"it should sweep
ed irs new conrracr Saturday. A !he market. An FDA advisory comspokeswoman said the charily was miuee advised !he ~gency las! monlh
cbnfident it had violated no anlilrilsl thai an ·ahemarive melhod of betler
laws and would respond quickly to blood tesring. also awaiting FDA
recem Justice Depanment subpoena~. approval. is equally effective.
Justice officials would not comScrubbed plasma "adds a cenain
men!.
· degree of safety that regular plasma
The Red Cross will .sell SD pia.~- - doesn"l have. but it also has some
rna to nonmember blood banks. polential downsides to ir." cautioned
charging them an as-yet-undercr· · Dr. Harvey Klein. transfusion chief al
mined markup ro recoup its invesl· !he National lnslilules of Heallh:
ment. including a $3 million loan to "'I'm concerned !hal it might be
Virex. said Brian McDonough. chief aggressively marke!ed" without
operating officer of Red Cross blood acknowledging the drawbacks.
services. • 1
The New York Blood Cen1er
"We' re commilled to the safesl developed the new technology. solpossible blood supply for the Amer- vents and detergents that dissolve the
icali public.'" Red Cross spokes- fatly coating of sue~ viruses as HIV.
woman Josie Marlin said.,."We hepatitis Band hepalitis C.C.rhen wash

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Clinron adminisrrarion is talking 10
House Republicans aboura GOP plan
. 10 creare a bipanisan c.ommission thai
would recommend ways ro ensure
Social Security"s long-tenn solvency.
a White House official said.
' Bur House Speaker New! Gingrich wen! funher in an inlerview Friday with The Associaled Press. say·
ing While l:louse chief of sraff EN~k·
ine Bowles !old him Presidenl Clin·
ton will sign · legislalion creating
such a commission. A House com·
miuee approved a GOP-wriuen bill
lasr week rhar would establish a pan-el of four Republicans and four
Democrats who would repon recommendalions by Feb. I. 1999.
·"We'regoing lo work it our." said
Gingrich. R-Ga.
Bowles lold Rep. Bill_Archer. R·
Texas. chairman of the House Ways
and Means Commiuee, !hal Clinlon
will sign rhe measure. Archer
spokesman Ari Fleischer said.
Should· that occur•. il could boos!
the polilically rouchy effon of
refonning Social Security so it can
withsland the -rcriremenl bf !he mas-·
sive baby boom gencrarion. which
begins in a decade.
Clinlon wanls changes enacred·
nexl year - afler November's con-

gressional elecrions. But years of ani·
mosity and distrusl between !he two
p~nies over the issue has lef1 the
prospecls for action uncenain .
While House economic adviser
Gene Sperling said he was already
lalking with GOP and Democmlic
aides 10 see if an agreemenl cun be
reached. He said !he While House
was worried !hal !he commission
might en_d up delaying !he process
and perhaps be rhe source of leaks to
reponers.

••

them our of the plasma.
•
For years. ri version of !he tech·
nology ha' been used in drugs made
from pla.,ma. such as immune glob-:
ulin or hemophiliacs' clouing factor.
In 1994. rhi: New York Blood Cenrer
created Vitex lo sell it for cleaning
whole plasma - transfusions thai ·
some 400.000 Americans gel yearly,
after rrauma or surgery.
The new technology .. is able 10
destroy ... 1he importanl viruses that
we know 1oday are transmined by.
mmsfusion," said Dr. Celso Bianco
of the · New York Blood Cenler:
which is not a Red Cross member and
thus will have to buy back irs own
invention.
..
Its problems:
,
• Only large balches of plasma can ;
be scrubbed; Doclors generally pre- •
fer 10 limil how of1en -· hundreds of:
blood donalions are pooled rogerher. :
because if one sick donor wa.• includ- •
eil 1hen dozens of patienls who :
received plasma from the pooled:
product would have been exposed to ;
infection.
·
•

'

.. Erskine told !hem we have con· · have acknowledged so far. After the ':
cems about il. and were inlerested in Ways and Means Cummillee :
working on rhings like that. bul approved the bill on Wednesday. ,
we're open and need to talk to administrarion officials said the com- ,
lhem:· said Sperling.
.
mission wa.' not needed.
,
One administration ofticial. ·who
The full House plans~1Rt •
spoke on condition of anonymily. lhe bill next Wednesday Or'\'hiii-SUaj. ·. '
•
said thai Bowles did not say during The Senate has yetlo act.
!he Thursday meering wilh Gingrich
Cl inlon has called forfqur nalion- :
!hal Pinion would sign !he measure. ally !elevised !own meelings on :
The While House ·s mere willing· Social Securily !his year. wilh a ·
ness 10 discuss the proposal wirh While House conference on the sub- :
Republicans goes funher !han they jeer in December.

ASTHMA?

to assume duties in Meigs May 1

'I'OMEROY- Meigs County will have a new animal humane agenl after
next week.
Carol Dye Leinley, Middleport, a dispatcher for lhe Pomeroy Police
Depanmenl. has been hired by the Meigs County Humane Sociely lo provide humane educalion. answer complainls aboul animal abuse and neglect.
and pursuing proseculion of those guilty of inhumane actions loward ani·
mats.
Lemley wi II assume her duties on May I .
• According lo Alden Wain. presidenl of rhe Meigs County Humane Soci,
ely. !he animals in Meigs County- whelher companion animals such as dogs
and cats. or domesricared and fann animals- will soon have their own advocale. someone whose job it is 10 pullheir welfare lirsl.
This advocale. !he Meigs Counly Humane Sociely's Humane agenr. will
be responsible for providing humane education: answering complainrs about
abuse and neglect. and. if necessary. proseculing !hose guilty of inhumane
.actions toward animals.
' "Ms. l.emley'scredenlials are jus! what we had wanted."' Waiu said. "She
has been trained as a peace otTicer 1hough 1he Buckeye Hills Police Acade- .

AT

THE MEDICAL,SHOPPE
. (800) 445·220.

CHESHIRE- Cheshire Village Council's regular monthly meeting
for May will be Tuesday. May 5 al 7:30p.m. in the village hall. Village
. Clerk Jennifer Harrison announced.

·Harley Owners Group achieves goal
GALLIPOLIS- A poker run and pany conducted by the Harley Owners Group Gallipolis Chapter on behalf of Toys for Tuls for !he Oulreach
Center of Gallia County was successful in rnc:eling its goal.
The group collecled $.1.166 and enabled 412 children to receive lwo
gifts- a hat and pair of gloves. and also a gift of !heir choice.
.
. The Harley Owners Group expressed its appreciation lo all businesses and communily members who d_onated to !he cause.

BHCC staff to answer questions _
MERCERVILLE- Buckeye Hills Career Cenler slaff will be on hand
al Soulh Gallia High School on Tuesday from 6-8- p.m. to discuss program choices for student• allending BHCC during !he 1998-99 school year.
All parenrs and prospective students are invited 10 auend.

Gallipolis officers issue citations ·
_) _GALLIPOLIS- The following citations were issued by Gallipolis City
re!•ce:
· .
Michael R. Smith. 26. 1170 State Route 141. Gallipolis. warmnt and
· driving under suspension; Raymond E. Cochran. 27. Parriot. assured clear
, dislance; Jarrod S. Berryman. 24. 6 Birch Lane, Gallipolis. driving under
: rhe influence. marked lanes and no operalors license; and Randy C. Dar• by, 36. Vinton. disorderly by inloxicaliorr.
,

~Minor injury

iiiitiiiiiitiiiiiitliiiA.iit«iiiiEiiiiiPI'IEB....
· ...

•

reported In accident

GALLIPOLIS - A lhree-car accidenl on SR 141 near Gallipolis on

!Friday resulted in minor injury 10 one of !he drivers.lhe Gallia-Meigs P~sl
o;of the S1a1e Highway Patrol reponed.

:· Judy K. Haggeny. 5l. 278 Debbie Drive. Gallipolis. was nul 1reated
al rhe scene of lhe' 7:35 a.m. •-ollisiun._rroopers !laid.
Troopers said a car driven by Sandra S. Houck. 26. 703Smokey Row
Road. Patriol. was ea.slbound when she wa.• unable to slop in time and
struck the rear of a car driven by Judi!h A. Goodard. 53. 2115 German
Ridge Road. Palriot.
.
The collision fon:ed Goodard"s car inlo 1he rear of 1he car driven by
Haggeny. according 111 '1he repon. Both Goodard .and Haggeny were
stopped for a stopped schoolbus al the time of the crash. troopers said.
Damage wa; mOderate 10 the Houck and Goodard behicles. and slight
10 Hag&amp;eny"s c·ar: Houck wa.s ci!ed for a."ured clear distance.

•

lays plans
for annual
bean dinner

.Cheshire Council will meet May 5

: GALLIPOLIS - Booked inlo the Gallia Counly Jail following arresls
• by authnrilies:
.
: • Tony R. Ferrell. 24. 107 Dillon Road. Gallipolis. Friday at 9:19a.m.
:by the Gallia County Sheriff's Depanment for interference wi1h custody
:and no opemtors license.
• • David M. Dudley. 45. Hebron. Friday ar I :39 p.m. by depuries for
~!heft.
· .
: • Palrick L. Mahaffey. -38. Vin1on, Friday a1 10:21 p.m. by Gallipolis
.
.
; Cily Polic,e for criminallrespa.,sing.
• • Adam C. Russell. 22. Point Plea.sanl. W.Va .• Salurday at I :54 a.m.
~by cily officers for contempt of coun and driving under the influence.

TRY A NEBULIZER COMPRESSOR.

my, studied social work althe University of Rio Grande. and has worked the derstorms. illness. and deprived of companionship. ban abu,ed animal, pure
and simple." she said.
Pomeroy Police Departmenl si nce 1988."
Waiu said thatrhe IJumane agent's job will be to intercede on this dog's
"In addilion. Ms. Lemley cares about the counly's animal populalion and
pan
and to educate t~ji! owner. The Humane Socie1y will continue lo work
has said that 'children and animals need lo have someone watch oul for !heir
wirh animal owners 10 protect the interest of the animals.
hest inleresls as !hey are defenseless."'
"The .Meigs County Humane Society will help, if we can. by aidmg peoLemley's posicion has been funded at $12.000 a year for 20 hours each
ple
10 buy lumber for a decent dog house. help them pay for the neutering
week. The Meigs County Commissioners contribuled S5.000. lhe Meigs
of
a
debilitated mama cat. and perhaps find a new. home.for an am mal they
Counly Humane Sociely conlributed $5.000, and !he United Fund of Meigs
cannot care for.'' she said. "The proplem here' is nut delibcratr cruelty but
Counly conlribuled S2.000.
.
"This was a !rue pannership between the counry.government and private ignorance - or behaving as one's parenls did."
Waiu said thai a small percentage of 1he cases the Humane A ~c nt will
. organizarions. and we are so grateful for the financial suppon. which clearinvesrigale will lead to prosecution. The agent will be work ing closely with
ly reflecrs a srrong col)lmirment on the part of many people." Wain said.
There is a need for an officer devoted lO animal cruelty calls. according John Lente•, Prosecuting Attorney. and already has buill-in mnncctiuns with
rhe various police depanments.
to Wain. and an even greuter need for education.
.
Lemley will be trained through workshops sponsored b) the Humane Soci• "Most calls thai tum ou1 to be valid."' she said. "are usually a matter .of
ety of !he United States and American Humane As-ocial ion and will soon
ignorance as to quality-of-life issues relared to what an animal needs."
"Most of these people ~ave. for some reason. an inabilily lo identify with oblain her accreditation as a Cruelty lnvestigjllor. Any cal l; for the new
an animal's plight. An undemouri•hed dog. chained. in mud to a leaky dog- Humane Agent should be referred to the Oftice of !he Prosecuting Anomey
house. never lei off its chain. never laken to the vet. ignored during !hun- at 992-6371. Wain said.

-Tri-County Briefs:--. Centerville

:Authorities place four in county jail

CENTERVILLE - Prepararions
for !he annual bean dinner and pamde
in Cenrerville are underway. wilh a
hosl of activiries planned by the
eve'nl's organiz!i!rs.
This years parade begins at II
·a.m. on SaiUrday. May 23 al the Cenlerville Community Park. It then
!ravels around the village and ends
back at 1he park. where a bean dinner. entenainment and activilies are
held.
Ann Daniels. one of the organizers. said that events at the park wi II
include a display of Belgian horses
owned by Jim and Jackie Kessinger.
a lire !ruck show open to all area volunteer fire departments. and a warer
ball fight between panicipating
VFDs.
Gallia Counly's ne~ 911 emergency communicalions sys1em will
be highlighted at the dinner. and a
represenrarive will be on hand toanswer questions.
Other activities are also planned
and will be announced later. Mrs.
Daniels said. A promotion on a picnic table is scheduled. she added.
Anyone planning lo enler the
parade. or needing additional informacion. can contacl Mrs. Dauiels al
245-5635.
In addition to bean soup. other
food ilems will be available al the
dinner. The Cenlerville Masonic
Lodge wi II sponsor a breakfast in t~e
lodge hall thai Salurday from 7- 10
a.m~. Mrs. Daniels said.
The bean dinner and parade. held
on !he Saturday of every Memorial
Day weekend. is sponsored by the
Centerville Volunteer Fire Depanmenl.

KCM-S educator briefe~
on civics in classroom
..
•

Gilleue wa.• killed with a handgun
Friday night at Nick's Place. about
two -miles· nonh of Edinboro. in
imrlhwesl Pennsylvania.
Pol ice spoke§man Mark Zaleski
said the boy shol Gillelte in !he he;W
on a palio in !he front of !he hall.
walked in~ide and fired several shots
and lefl the building lhmugh a rear
exit
Nick's Place owner James Strand . .
carrying a shotgun. captured the suspeel in a field behind 1he· building.
Zaleski !laid.
Aboul 240 studenls had a11ended
1he dance wil~ the theme, "I" ve Had
lhe Time of My Life."
The suspect had menriuned !hat he
wa.- going to make !he dance "memorable;· an unidenlitled studentlold
!he Mlll11ing News of Erie. Zaleski
had no commenl on the report. saying rhe shooting wi\ under invesri·
galion. .
.
Sludent Shane Rock said he saw
lhe boy wilh !he gun shoot another
Sludenl in !he foot.
"I didn't 5CC the shol but I heanl
ir. and then another."". said Lucien
Haury. a Parker sludent. •·About 10
or 12 of us lhen piled into a clllliCI."
He sang 10 lry 10 \eep other slu·
denls calm. Girl§ in Salin dresses and
swealers and boys in necklies huddled logether ou!Side !he hall after lhe
shooting.
j
"It seems we are now joining a .
growing list of communiries !hal ;
have had 10 deal wilh lhis type of vio- I
lenee.'" die swe police spokesman
commenled.
The shooting ~ jUSias !he
dance was breaking up. a1 around I0
p.m. Edinboro i~ about 100 miles
north of Pittsburgh.

•

~umane offic~r

••

White House discussing Social Security commissiQn

14-year-old he.ld in teacher's
slaying at graduation dance
EDINBORO. Pa. I AP) - A student shot and k_illed a teacher who
wa' a chaperone at an eighth-grade
·graduation dance before he wa.' disanned by a banquet hall owner in the
lield out back. otTicials and witnessessay.
Slate police were preparing a
murder charge againsl the 14-yearold boy. an eighrh-grade srudent al
Parker Middle School. fur the ~hoot­
ing of John Gillette. 48. Police said

..

Probe targets Re~ C _oss' hold
on blood-s-crubbing techology

OHIO Weather

Regi~nal

'

April 21, 1988

CHESHIRE- Cheryl Swain of
Kyger Creek Middle School was one
of 25 reachers and librarians from
across Ohio· who assembled al the
Statehou.o;e April 15 to learn more
aboul Ohio civics and leadership.
Swain joined a group of educators
invited by members of tbe·Hnuse and
Senale education commfllees who
were briefed on how the dellK)Cralic ·
pnx:ess can be broughl to life in lhe .
cla•sroom or library. ·
The evenl wa.• called -statehouse
Educator Day.- and focused on u~ing
technology-ba'ied materials 10 help
lhe Slate's Sludcnt.• .ucceed on lhe cilizenship portion of Slate profiCiency
exam~.

Afrer a brief welcome from Hou.'IC
Speaker JoAnn David.'IOII. educa10111
atrended work..Jiops where !hey in~aacred wilh 1he material5. including a
video: 1eacher's guide. CD-ROM
and Interne! 5ile. Afremoon work!lhops included a rour of 1he reSiored
19th cenrury Slatehouse. an inlrn-

duclion lo "Proficiency Palhways: · a
new Statehouse 1oor program. and an
overview of the role of le!,!islalive
comminees in !he government
proces.s.
Te educarors were joined ala funcheon by many legislarors or lheir
represenlalives. including Kalhy
Cnnez-Carpenter of Sen. Michael
Shoemaker's office. as well ·a.s edu·
calionallobf:lyisl.s and members of lhe
media.
All panicipanls received a cum·.
plimenrary •-opy of 1he ma1erials for
u.&lt;e i!' !heir cla.•sroom or library. The
even! was sponS&lt;ired by 1he Capitol
Squa~ Review and Advi~ Board . .
and lhe Swehouse Educat1011 &amp; v;,._
· i!Ot5 Center a&lt; pan of lhe Living
Ohio Govemmenl Series proj«l.
For more informalion on lbe inrer- ·
active coviC5 pmgrdm. or 10 receove
copiei of I be mare rials. coni act DouJ!
• lanlry, education coordinalor of lhe
S!alehou:&lt;e Educalion &amp; Visilors .
Cenrer. ar614-752-9717.

.Two plead innocent to-charges
of tprturing pair in Pike County
WAVERLY lAP)- Two men have pleaded innoce0110 charges that lhey
tonured riiRe-boy~ durinl!; what au'lhorilies ~~aid was a @OR~ iilirialion. _
Br.ldley J. Key and Michael P. Dillard. both 20. pkaded onnocenlto child
endangering charges in Pille Counly Common Plea• ~ou~.
Child endangering i• puni~ by up 10 five yean m pn.'iOII and a $10.000
fine.

Meigs EMS runs
POMEROY- Unils of lhe Meig.,
County Emergency Medical Service
recorded nine calls for a."islance Fri·
day. Unils responding included: .
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:39 p.m .. Village Green Apartments. Middleport. Woodrow Call.
trealed atrhe scene. Middlepon squaa
a..sis~,ed:

5;56 p.m.. Vine Street. Racine.
Leonard Ke&lt;mig. St. Joseph's Hospilal. Racine squad a."isted:
8: 15 p.m.. U.S. 33 . . Pomeroy.
AuSiin Wolfe. lrealed at I he scene.
MIDDLEPORT
3:35 a.m.. volunleer fire depanment to Cheshire Food Mart. oven
fire. no injuries reponed:
7:41p.m.. Lagoon Road. Amanda
Buckley. Holzer Medical Cenler.
POM.EROY .
12: 13 p.m.. Plum Street. Glenn
Grueser. Plea.'lanl Valley Hospilal.
Central DistyJich squad a&lt;sisled.
REEDSVILLE
6: II p.m.. VFD and squad to Failh
Full GQspel Ch!Jrch. gra.ss fire. no
injurie~ reponed.
RUTLAND ,
.
1:11 p.m.• slate Route 124. Sue
Delille. HMC.
TUPPERS PLAINS
10:26 am.. SR 248. Helen Nehon.
S1. Joseph's Hospital.
·

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PLANNING FOR CONTEST- The winner of
speech contest on freedom and the U.S. eco·.
nomic·system will be featured during.the Gal·
llpolls River Recreation Festival July 2-4. The
contest, open to all Gallla County high echool
students, Is being coordinated with the Loren
M. BeJn! Center for Economic Education at the
Unlv11rslty of Rio Grande, and"the Students In

a

River Recreation Festival adds.
speech con~est to activity list
.

Sl FE member Debbie Linn said
GALLIPOLIS - An address by elits of free enterprise 1ha1 those of us
!he
pmgmm .. is a tuul for the students
who
are
older
have
enjoyed
for
many
the winner of newly-created lnde_tn
use
the Dedaralion uf lndepen- ·
pendence Day Speech Conlesl orga- years." Gus! said.
dence
and
apply it to them perSonal··1 feellhallhe program will serve
nized by local high ~chool sludenls
will be fealured during the 199M Riv' as a boosllo Students in Free Enter- ly."
Contesl rules. a copy nf' 1be U.S.
er Recrealion Feslival in Gallipolis prise bel:ause il is more hands~n and
will
mean
more
10
lhem
on
lhe
Cunslituliun.
and related items can he·
July 2-4.
furure;·
said
Tim
Divens.
vice
presiobtained by calling the Berry Cenrer
Members of the Uryiversity of Rio
·
Grm¥1es S!udenl~ in Free En1erprise dent of the Rio Grande SIFE chapter. al 245-7366.
chapter. and the Loren M. Berry Cenler for Economic Educalion at Rio
Grande will sponsor and administer
to speech contest in all Gallia County high schools.
~he
The winning speech anrl iL• autbor
will be featured during the opening
ceremonies and pa1rio1ic program at
.l
fUlL
1he festival .
The contest is open 10 all Gallia
County high school studenls. More
informacion · is available from the
Berry Cenler. Teachers whose slu·
992·7943
dems panicipale in the program will
be recognized.
Jerry Gusl. the cen1er"s direciOr.
ha.• been the conresl coordinalor.
·-roday. we must be concerned in
rest9ring some of 1he freedoms lhat
have been slowly eroding so lhal our
children may enjoy some oflhe hen-

FLIT ROOF
See

POMEIOY,OH

HOLZER
HEALTH HOTLINE

Authorities check
debris for clues
HAMILTON I AP) - Authorilies
are looking at objecls found along !he
banks of !he Great Mi~mi River on
·Friday for clues 10 the idenlily of a
torso.
The remains &lt;If a woman were
found alona the east bank of tbe river by two boys on April .13 after the
river""" bel:ause of heavy rains.in
.;oulhwest Ohio.
The river has receded and osen
again ,;nee the 1nrso wa• discovered.
leaving debris alonJl Ilk! banb. A
learn of 15 10 20 officers from the
Butler County sheriff" s office and lhe
Hamilton police depanmenl used
boats. bicycles. a helicopt£r and
trained dogs to search both banks on
Friday.

IE·ELECI

liJ

. HAROLD G.
MONTGOMERY

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
GAlliA COUNTY

10·1I FOB PIOGIISS

•••••

' ~ c,.,.nyl'ou Keep•
N• YOfk tift ln8Uf1111Ce Company
I u. 2, l'OX fK&gt;- 0 A
Paint Plaa••"· WV ~
Bus. 304 875-2323 I 304 340 4350

•

,

. ....... . .

...

experts with Duro-Last "The World's Best Roof.''
S·year
guar11111ee.

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES

During my term as County Commi..ioner we
have established an aggresaive grant program
bringing In more than
'

Free Erlterprlse chapter at Rio Grande. Seen
plan11ing the conteat ara, from left, Brent East·
man, festival chairman; Jay Moore, p~:esldent
of the Gallla County Chamber Of Commerce; .
SIFE member Debbie Unn; SIFE VIce President
Tim Divens; and Jerry Gust, director of the
Berry Center.

DDLLIRI

to Gallla County for.various projects:
"Road .&amp; Bridge,· Sewer, Flood Damagf Repair,
Emergency Shelter, Hou•lng Rehab, Are &amp;
Emergency Protection, Senior Center, O.rtreach
c.nter &amp; Veterans Service•.
Paid lor by m. candi&lt;tate. 2624 Sl. Rt. 141

Children imitate their parents.
Make sure to set a good example for
a healthy, safe and happy childhood.
Speak to a registered nurse about your
. healthcare concerns by calling

1-800-462-5255
7 4ays a week • 6. a••• lllltll Z a. Iii.
As~ your physician

about medication concerns
••

�•

Commentary
junb~ ~imts· itntitttl
'Est!Wfisfietf_in-{966
825 -r:renue, Galllpous, Ohio
61
2342 • Fax: 446-3008
111 C rt Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 ·Fax: 992·2157

c)
'M_"W;jj

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Robert L. Wingett
Publisher
Hobart Wll8011 Jr.
Execu11ve Editor

Diane Hill
Controller

T7N ........ '? ' M~W~~eomt• ,.,.,_ to the Nlltor from rtnldart on • brcMd ,.~
Df ..,..... Shott ,.,._ (3DO - · or ioN) , ... lho boot chorrco of bolng puf&gt;.
1 -. "l)'pool-. lll"t protonwl 1nd ollmoy bo e&lt;lllld. Elch should lnclutJ. • •ill·
,.,..,., acfcftMe. and tUythN phoM num,.r. SP«IIy • date ~I lh_,,., • ,.,,,.,"

to • ,.now

fN

attic,.,_,,

,.II to:

Uttw. ro , . Mlltor, ' ' ona ot the

add,.,..,

FAX numttet. IMfN abottw. TN editor al~ ~lcom.. lnt.rntt mall from our

,...,._, add IJNd to ~lfriiH.HM@rlurekiMI.C'Om.

Letters to the editor

.

Sunday, April ~. 1998

By Jack Anderson
and Jen Moller
WASHINGTON -- Professional
woniers take note: Problems are looming in the People's Republic of China,
and they have nothing to do with the
endemic human-rights abuses that
continue to take place tb;re.
The eanh's most populous country
is runnmg out of water. And that could
spell big trouble-- not just for the Chinese, but for the rest or the world .as
well. Water scarcity means that China
may soon be unable to grow enough
grain to feed a population that is
expected to grow by another 300 rrullton people in the next quaner century.
That's the conclusion of a rare
study by the National Intelligence
Council, an umbrella group of U.S
intelligence agencies. Not content to
merely chase sptes and snoop on foretgn gove rnments, the NlC has put Its
htgh-tech capabihttes to work finding
out how China expects to feed tts
growing population, which is expected
to reach 1.5 billion by 2025
The NIC study was prompted by

the work of one
Lester Brown. a
fonner tomato
farmer who's
become one of
the
world's
leading envtronmental
researchers. He
is also the
founder and
president or
World Watch, a
Moller &amp;
Anderson
Washington
think tank.
Brown was the fJrst to sound ihe
alarm' l"ith a 1995 book, "Who Will
Feed China?" The book won considerable notice in the capital, but wasn 't a
big hit in China: after its pubhcauon,
Chinese officials promptly called a
press conference to denuunce any and
all suggestion that China would have
to abandon its long-held goal of agricultural self-sufficiency. (That same
year, the Chinese also nnponcd nearly
15 tons of wheat.)
"You have to remember that food

security is very imponant to the Chinese," Brown explains. "All or the
curront leaders there arc surVivors of
the great famine ," which claimed an
estimated 30 million lives in 1959-61
"It's a very sensitive issue "
But lately, Chinese officials have
taken the unusual step of admitting
that, yes, they do have a problem -and, no, it won't be easy to solve. Ovc;
the last decade, China's economy ha·;
been among the fa.&gt;test-growmg on
eluth. More industry means greater
water use, and mort; people movmg
from ra!'"'s to cities, where people usc
more water per person.
The hard numbers cenainly back up
the notion that water ts already scarce.
The Yellow River -- Chma's version of
the Mississippt -- fatlcd to reach the
sea last year for more ttJan 260 days,
the lon gest in recorded history. In fact,
1972 was the lirst year thm the nvcr
lailed to reac h the sea. Nuw it's an
annual occurrence. Hundreds ~f waterintensive mdustrtal projects upstream
arc using up the rest of the water
In other pans of Chma. aqutlcrs arc

1l{[ GCQ~ C~ANNEL -

ALL AI. r ALL TJ.IE. TIME: I
~RRVI
~Kro...

W"ying up as the result of rap1d tndustnaltzauon. Rivers, streams and lal(es
that were thrivtngJusl a few years ago
no longer exist according to satellite
photos. . •
China ISn I ~ fJrst country to face
such water scareny -- only the btggest.
When other nauons, such as Israel,
hegan running out of water, they d1d
the only senSible thmg: ~y tmponed
grain. But,Chma IS too b1g !~rely on
tmpons. ll s already the ~orld s large~
gram producer, and nght now It s
about 95 percent se If-suffitcten t·
Accordmg to Brown, the world
may not be able to pick up the sla~k
should Chma reverse cou.rse and stan
1mponmg a large pan or tts food supply. !n the United States, grain production ts.almost at peak capactty, and t_he
same is true. for most other maJOr
gram-prnducmg countrtes. Only
Argcntma, Bro-:vn says, has theca~tty to senously mcre:"e Its production.
So why has all thts become the subjcct of a study by our $30 hlllton-ayear intelligence apparatus' Because
1.3 htllton human beings currently live
on about $1 per day -- or barely
enough to feed themselves. If the price
of grain »hould rtse as China prospers. those arc the people who stand to suffer the most: the tcemmg mtllions·in
Mexico City. Pakistan and central
Alrtca who would plunge from suhsistcn•-c mill sutrvation.
When men can no longer li.'Cd their
families. they usually take to the streets
in protest All of a sudden. an·esoteric
p&lt;Jitcy debate over irrigation methods
nnd mdustrial water usc becomes a

'

' CLEVELAND &lt;AP) - Most
Ohio voters are just beginning to
learn about school-funding needs,
says u backer of the proposed state
.. sale,;-lax increase to help pay for edu·
\:ation.
" Very candidly, I would say most
~itizens ' are only j'ust starting to focus
in on this issue," Mark Real, director of the Ohio Children's Defense
.Fund. said during a debate at the
' Cleveland City Club forum on Fri'day.
· · The ta.•k in th~ di!YS remaining
until the May 5 primary election,
when state Issue 2 is decided. is to
make a convincing argument that a
lax increase is beneficial, he said.
But Ohio Roundtable President
David Zanotti, who opposes the
'school-funding proposal, said voters
\ heed not view the situation us a crisis.

"The sun will sttll come up on
May 6th. Bad public policy is never
'a good option." he said.
The Ohio Roundtable is a conser·

-

JJadbal • Ptlgfl\5

.....

Senior programs help .a lot

Politics, taxes, greed

,By AARON MARSHALL
As for the cont.inuing downward
spiral
in voter turnout, Tavares said
T·S Columbus Bureau
COLUMBUS - Looking to she would try to bring voters out by
make the leap from the Statehouse to making Elecnon Day "more ol an
, statewide offic~ holder is Columbus event" and showing people the dif, . State Rep. Charleta Tavares. the ference one vote can make. "If we
endorsed Democratic candidate for stan highlighting the number or votes
, _Ohi~ Secretary o(State.
that are won or lost by one vote that
_ Meanwhile. her Democratic pri- shows people that yes, my one vote
.. mary foe. maverick candidate Mark does matter." she said
Hanni, hopes to hop from hts
Broadcasting daily on a
, _Youngstown radio talk show host's Youngstown radio station as " Mad
_ .chatr into the position overseemg , Mark In The Morning." Hanni
Ohio's electoral process.
IJlinces no words in directly attacking
Although both Democrats are run- Tavares' candidacy as one for~ed
ning for the same office. the similar- upon the Democratic pany in the
ities end there. While Tavares picks name or diversity.
her words carefully offering up buzz:
"She doesn 't have the educationwords about "reconnecting ~ople to al background or the experience to be
government," Hanni fil]:s from the lip Secretary of Stllte. Her only qual iii·
calling himself " the only qualilied cation to be Secretary of State is that
candidate" and saying the Democra- she is a minority female," he s:~id.
tic pany wa.&lt; " bullied" into suppon- "Put that in the paper I don 't care."
' ing · Tavare• by African-Americun
As for Hanm's qtialilicattons. he
leaders.
points to a 16-year stmt as the deputy
Whtchever Democrat survives this director. of the Mahoning County
,primary tussle will have an bigger Board of Elections and his experience
challenge waiting beyond the · May owning a company which supervisprimary. State Treasurer J. Kenneth • e~ union eleclions.
Blackwell. who _jumped into the _ "I am the most experienced and
Republican Secretary of State's race qua1itied for the. job. I' II do a ~;ood
unopposed after toying with a Repub- job as se"elary ol state and bring
·iican ·gubernatorial bid. awuits the insight into a number or problems
primary winner.
that counties face everyday ... h~ said.
For Tavares, who serves in the
Hanni ha.&gt; some sweeping changes
·Democratic House leader,;hip. the . he would undennke if ushered into
decision to give up her seat in her sec- office including elimmating spectal
ond term for a run for Secretary of elections. which he calls 1'strategies
' State's Office was a no-brainer. She designed by government entities to
said her interest in elections has but it pass taxes ... and boqsting the pay or
thrnugh nearly a dozen "get out the poll workers from $60-75 dollars-avote" campu1gns dating back tel her day to at least •$! ~5 dollars.
high school days.
In order to encourage young vot"I am the best qualified person ers. Hanni said he thinks the Secrebecause I really believe in the work tary of State's office should offer an
' nf the Secretary of State." she said. "aggressive educational system" in
" When you want something I believe high schools and colleges on the
imponanee or voting.
you do a better job."
While Hanni did not tile a pre-priTo do a better job as Ohio Secretary of State. Tavares proposes taking mary spending repon because he did
' legislative hearings on the road and not raise or spend more than $1.(K)0,
incorporating hearings through tele- he insists his candidacy is viable.
"I'm trying to conduct a gra-sroots
conferencing to encoumge more peopie to become involved in the polili- campaign. but it's on a limited basis.
, cal process. "I think government has It's almost a lo.st art anymore ... he
to do a better job of getting out to the said.
people." she said.
'
She added that th~ Secretary of
Slate·s office needs to ~ more
involved in educating people about
candidates and issues and calls lor
greater cooperation between the
office and nonprofil organizations in
getting infonnation to the public.
'This is an office that I believe C".in
do a whole lotto help people with the
issues they arc dealing with every
day." she said.

muller of nat1onal sccunty.

arrested.
-Oregon: Rcltgious war memorial

Roy Moore of Alabama. He is being
harried through the courts like a
removed.
.
' heinous cvil&lt;locr because Ito ha.• a
- Tcxa..: Teacher dismissed for reli - home-made plaque of the Ten Comgious heliciS. employees dtsmtSsed for mandments hanging on the wall and
praying
opens the scss•ons prayer. He must
- MJSsourr Cafeteria workers dis- now 'defcn4 his right against the
missed for 1CI1g10us greetmg.
ACLU lawsuit.
,
.
- llltnoJS: School bans rcltgious TAnother U.S. District Judge :in
shin.
Alabama. lm DeMent, ha.' issued un
- North Caroltna Zoning ordi- order prohthiting: students from readnance outla ws ilomc Bible study.
ing the Bihle in study hall; students
- South Caroltna· Rcltgious profes- from &lt;.li!~it.:Ussing the meaning ul
sor dcmcd tenure
Chrtstmas; prayer during nattnn"l
- Ohto. Gospel banner 'SC 17Cd at emergencies; nrc.lcrs 'rclig1ous scnslsporting event.
tivlly tr:.uning' rnr eduCators und .
~ Virg1n1.1; PuhliCSt.:hool condemns
threatens stilT penalttes litr nnn-cnmprayer
pliancc. His order a.~s•gns .um.lcn.:uvcr
~ Wcsl Virginia: Sui1 chnllcngcs
federal "monitnrs" tn several schmls
free Bthlcs for students
to ensure that his &lt;trders iu-c cnf(&gt;rccd.
- Nchrasb Employee l i~rced to And we thought tlic secret p&lt;&gt;licc operaucnd pnJ-hnm•Jscxual scrn1n;1r.
ated only m third work! countries.
- Ponnsylvani.r 56 sixth-grade £trls
lmagtnc lcderal agents roaming the
forced to dismhe and undergo exams, halls of pulllic sch•~•ls tn make sure
indudm~ gynecological, wtthout
children do nnt pray or read their
infonned parental consen t anu against Bibles or share thetr fatth with other
the girls' Wish~~
students' Consider carefully. my
Should we tncludc the humiliatton friends. what is happening in America
of a first grader hy a teacher for pray- right now hefnrc you accept the
ing over his lunch 1 Or the boy who rhetoric you cenamly will hear: and
was reprimanded for rcadtng his Bihle what you wtll do about thts tragedy,
on the sc hool·bus'! Or the Texas school
When we set out to destroy the
district that refused to allow students very foun&lt;lations upon which decency,
to pray on schcx1l propeny heli1rc morality, and civility are ba.o;cd, should
cla.&gt;scs during the nationally rccog- we be surprised that we have the curnil.ed "Sec you at the Pole" rally'' Bal- rent state of affairs'! Will we continue
anced reponing should include lhcsc, to surrender to such nonsense and
don't you thmk ''
.
insaniLy''
Removing God from the puhltc
Robert Weedy is a corresponsquare isn't limited to JUSt the ahovc. dent tor the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Look at what is happening to Judge

0

.

Moderate Republ_icans-, take cove-r
By Joseph Spe.:~r
One breed or cat I'm glad I'm not
right now is a Republican moderate
(assuming the :•enus still exists). .._,
life for them in the next year or two
promises to he a hellacious experience.
In :i couple or months, mdepe~dent
counsel Kenneth Starr will dispatch a
- rcpon to Capitol Hi I) ..!ilying out Bill
Clinton's alleged misdeeds, . and the
leadership will have to decide wl)ether
to conduct impeachment heanngs.
What they would like to do, given
Clinton's popularity. is kick up just
enough fuss to look respectable and
get a few weeks of positive public tty,
then bury the mess with a reSQiution of
censure or something akin to that. •
Fat chance. The Hill runneth over
with conservative Republicans who
regard "family values" as a paramount ·and much ignored issue. It is
their duty, they believe, to oust a president who is thought to have cheated
on his wife.
Then come the elections of' '98.
which the right wing will try to tum
into a referendum on morals and
social issues.
Then comes the presidential election or 2CXX), wliich could. evolve into

a titanic battle
· l:.ted a I0-pagc memo to House
}letween
the
Republicans about the need to pursue
devout and the
a moral agcnrla.
satanic.
"There is a strong dcsJrc across .
What's
a
America for a resurgence of basic
Republican
morality and a clearer focus on the
moderate to do?
truly imponant things in life," he
Where are you
wrote. He predicted that "values and
supposed to go
morality will be the dominant issues"
if you are a Joyal '
in the campaigns of 1998 and 2000.
member or the .
In March, radio moralist James
pany of Lincoln
Dobson took GOP leaders to task for
but
sincerely
Spear
not promotmg the issues they had
believe that the
.
campaigned on when they took congovernment ha• no nght to icll a trol of Congress in 1994. He threatwoman what to do with her bOdy? Or ened to holt the ranks and take his five
that gays have a right to exist? Or thai million listeners with him and predictUncle Sam has a legitimate role 10 ed that the pany could disappear like
play in edooation1 Or that schOOls the Whigs of the 1850s.
should not be convened into church·
Dobson, head of the Colorddo
cs'!
. Springs-based Focus on Family,
I know what I would do. I woulil arranged !nterviews with the Washinghunker down and maintain a very low · ton Post and New York limes and
profile for a few y~. thai's what.
headed east to hammer the heathens
Signs of an approaching brouhaha where his words might get their attenover "values" have been in the air fur tion, bot was headed off by an emermonths. Sometime in the recent past. gency squadron that included GOP
for example. House Majority Leader chainnan lim Ntcholson a.nd.CongresDick Armey apparently had a sional leaders, as well as House conepiphanic experience. He began to servatives who feared they might be;
talk about accepting Ovist as his per- tainted if Dobson slopped on his tar
sonal savior, anctin January,,he circu-. with too broad a brush.

If you want more pn.:f of the coming debate over morals. look at the presidential ltqlefuls wh:• are making the
most noise ao; they begin the shuffle that
will culminate in tbc nomination or
someone to ride the white hilrsc for tbc
GOP in 21XXl.
Sen. John Ashcroli. R-Mo.• anomted
by no lcs.s an ornclc than Goorge Will as
the "pinup candidate" for social con'iCrvarives, is a Pcnlccostal Otristiao who
doc.• not drink, Sllloke or dance and presumably believes in raith healmg and
speaking in tOngues.
Gary Bauer, head of the arch-conservative Family Research Council,
inveigh.• against abonion, gay fights,
gun control, bilingual education and
the National EndoWment for the Ans.
He a.o;sumed control or his group at the
request or James Dobson.
Dan Quayle, former vice presidenl,
announced oo NBC's "Meet tbc Pless"
that be is a faithful spouse who 11M never
strayed. Whether this was a maner of
morality 0( tbc simple rear that Marilyn
would squash him like a potatoc bug, he
never did say.
S.yonf1111, moderate friends. Sec
you afier the millennium.
"
J011eph Spear Is a syndbted
w.riter tor NEA •

'

equity lawsuit," Zanotti said. "This
tool wa' designed to seize authority
for school funding from stale legislatures and local communities and
place that funding authority in the
hands of the judiciary."
Real acknowledged that many
school boards and superintendents
oppose Issue 2.
"They think the Supreme Coun is
relieving them of their obligation to
go before local homeowners and ask
for propeny tax increases." he said.
"But that is not what the Supreme
Coun (justices) satd. What they said
is you must reduce reliance on tt.e
property tax. and that's what Issue 2
does."
Zanotti -said voters should not be
swayed by the propeny-tax reduction
built into Issue 2.
"The property tax notion is
designed to try lo appease the coun."
he said. "Really. it's a selling technique to ·gel people to think it's a
tradeoff."

I

Floor .vote approaches on Amendment
ditwns on public
propeny,
includmg
schools, shall
not
be
infringed. Neither the United
States nor any
state
shall
require any person to join in
p1 ayec or other
Weedy
religious activi.
ty,
prescribe
school prayers, discriminate agamst
religion, or deny equal access to a benefit on account of religwn."
· Essentially this AmenJment would
do the followmg ·
- It would strengthen and rcallinn
our right to religious freedom and our
fundamental right to rccogn11.e God.
bOth pnvately and publicly.
- It would cotTCct coun actions and
trends whtch have suppressed religious expression and discriminated
against people and organ11.attons of
faith.
- It would permit student-led. student-initiated school prayer.
Since we once approved of the
Gideons giving Bibles to anyone who
wanted one. and now we give out condoms and ban Bible distribution, perhaps we need to review just a few
.other activities of recent years:
• New Mexico: Teacher suspended
for answering religious question. ·,
- Arizona: Praying psychologist's
license revoked.
- Nevada: JJospel tract distributors

vative public-policy organization
ba.,ed in Solon. a Cleveland suburb.
Backers of Issue 2 say the S1.1
billion raised annually from the penny-per-dollar sales-tax increase
would help satisfy the Ohio Supreme
Coun's'l\rder to come up with a more
equitable way to pay for public education.
A I~ percent cut in property tax
bills- up to $275- would occur if
the issue passes, accounting for half
of the money raised annually by the
increase. The rest would be funneled
to Ohio's 611 school districts m higher per-pupil state substdies and more
help repairing or replaetng school
buildings.
Voters also will be asked. tn Issue
I, to amend the Ohio Constitution to
allow the Legislature to borrow money for school projects using bonds
backed by the full faith and credit of
the state
f
" We are here today because of a
political strategy being used across
America. state by state, known as the

Politician
meets. radio Advocates
.
·personality in primary want grant
run for state treasurer for welfare

In httlc over a month, President
Clmton wtll visit China to talk about a
variety of 1ssues, including human
rights and trade. But if the president
really wants to huild his hridgc to the
new millennium, ·a good place to stan
would be to find a solution to a looming water shonage that might soon be
the world's problem-- notjvst China's.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Deilr Editor,
The Meigs County Council on Agmg is asking for your suppon in the renew- By ROBERT WEEDY
al of our one mill levy. What people don't know is that this levy provides care
Now that the House Judtciary
for hundreds of Meigs County's elderly. Many or these individuals could lose Committee has approved H.l. Resolutheir only access to in-home care. personal attendant services, and home deliv- tio~ 78, the Religious Freedom
ered meals.
Amendment, by a 16 to II vote, we
, The growth of the number of elderly m Metgs County who become frat I, dis- can expect a barrage or negative
, abled, or otherwise cannot live independently is mcreasmg at an alarming rate. rhetoric. We have heard thts in the past
These individuals arc our neighbors, friends, and family members. People will from those who claim to be afraid that
1
not stop getung sick if our levy fat is and people with Alzheimer's disease will 'right-wing extremists' wtll take over
: not suddenly be able to take care of tb!:mselves if there ts no fundmg to provtde the country in the name of religion.
these services.
·
ThiS is some of what we will he told in
As you vote on May 5. remember that the ltvcs ol many of Meigs County's the months ahead as a floor vote
most sick. frail. and vulnerable will he at stake . We need to he reminded that pro- approaches:
grams like those providC!I by the Meigs County Counctl on Aging arc a life-line
- We don't need this Amendment,
for many families Without them many lamihcs have nowhere to turn. We arc we already have the First Amendment
all nne accident or tllncss away from needing thc,;c services I urge you to vote in the Bill of Rights guaranteeing free"yes" m suppon or the one null rcn"wa~ levy litr the Mci.gs County Counctl on dom of religion
Aging.
- God doesn't need any help. He ·is
Scott M. DiDon, doing just fmc. The church ts llounshfiSCal director, mg.
Meigs County
- The Amendment w1ll tear down
Council on Aging, Inc. the Constitution provtsion of separation of church and state.
- ll11s is JUSt a poliucal payoff nf
the 'religious nght'.
Dear Eduor,
- This action will just clear the way
Please vote "yes" for 1he Renewal Levy for the Meigs County Council on for puhltc fundmg of religtnus
Aging. My wife, Betty and I have recctvcd help for our "mom&lt;" through the schools
many programs offered through our Scntor Center Mainly. the Pa.«pon proWe are now supposed to draw the
gram, Alzheimcrs Suppon Group, Anhntis Suppon Group. Meals on Wheels. conclustOn: "Why would anyone want
and the Caregiver's Reher program, for the Caregtvers. The dally programs at such a bogeyman a.s this'!" Nmicc that
the center have also helped a lot. those includmg. lunch. excretsmg. crafts. they wi II not tell us just what the
RSVP (that helps many causes in many ways) and the many transponatton pro- Amendment says. Let's take a look at
grams fleeded to carry out all or these programs. The staff and personnel have the wording:
been very helpful, and do a good job providing proper management of these pro"To secure the people's right to
grams. The programs and system does work. Again, PLEASE vote "YES." We acknowledge God according to the
feel ihat our mothers had extra years added to their lives because of the services dictates of conscience: Neither the'
they received fr~ these programs
United States nor any state shall estabDonald and Betty Maurer lish any official religion, but the peoPomeroy ple's right to pray and to recognize
their r~ligtous beliefs, heritage, or traFrom the Whitehouse. through the Statelse. to the Counhousc. America is
being consumed from witbin by a cancer o immoraltty.. trresponstbility. and
indifference. and charactenzed by he$.~ nd greed. Thts dtsease has already
• eaten away ovcr half the income or :iiC average American in taxes and is forever
seeking more--always in the name or a very emotional cause: the children, the
poor, the elderly. What happened 10 the tax dollars already levied for these purposes? Docs it go to where llts pr·. ·miscd?
Unfortunately, far too much goes to the pockcL' of the career politicians.
bureaucraiS. and their cronies.
Would you be proud to mise a son or daughter who doesn't know truth from
fantasy and who has the morals or an alley em·&gt;
Would you be proud-if they showed the same responsibili1y as our state legislators who continue to dodge the responstbdtty of adequate school funding by
"Jetting the people decide" (whtle in fact the people do not tuve .a reasonable
choice from which to choose)? If a school has 2 administrators for every 3 faculty members. is it any wonder why costs are so high. yet Johnny still doesn't learn?
Does such a school really need more money·&gt;I think it needs fewer administra·
ton. (There are instances in Ohio where t~is is die case')
Would you be proud to raise someone who would lorctbly silence "a few old
guys" who tum up the heat by having the audacity, to ask some question~ or tell
the truth?
Well. don't laugh, betause it happens from the Whitehouse (executi ve privilege) tlwoogh the Statehouse (the attempted end ritn around the Supreme Coun
funding~) to tile Counhouse (eliminattng public panicipation &amp; failing to
rapond to citizen requests to speak)!
.
In all honesty, I doubt that there Is much that we Galha Countians can do in
Washington or Columbus, but we CAN stan here m home. If you feel that you
want someone who will treal your tax dollars a.' though they were his own hard
earned dollars, someone who will listen, someone who can stand the heat, and
somcor.e who has the integrity and honesty to represent the taxpayers. not the
power players, tt- I would urge you, this May 5, to ask for a Repdblican ballot
and cast your vote -1101 for an incumbent Goliath, but for David .. W. McKenzie.
Robert 0. Schmoll, Jr
Thunnan

I

Backer, opponent debate
merits of state ballot issue

Chinese peopl.e facing water ·Shortage

Dear editor
I am an edu~ator in the Gallipolis Oty School Dostnct and I'm asking voters
to cast their ballots against Stare Issue 2 on May 5th. That legJsla!lon wtll do
nothing to tmprove the quality or education tn our schools.
Last year _the·Ohio Supreme Coun decided that the state's current system of
'funding education is unfair, inadequate, and therefore unconstitutional. That rul ing has created a once-in-a-lifetime opponunity for government leaders to correct the way Ohio's schools are funded A "systell)a!lc over,haul ," whtch is what
the coun mandated, would reduce local reltance on propeny taxes and lmk state
funding to the actual cost or an adequate education. Issue 2 merely replaces
some propeny tax wtth a sales tax. It does not climmate a system by which the
quality of pubhc education is strongly detennined by local wealth. If the issue
passes. I am afraid that most people will believe they have fixed the probl~m and
that our general assembly will have little rea.&lt;on to take any funher action.
Issue 2, also known as House ,Bi11697, wa.&lt; an aflcnhought that followed the
many unfunded mandates contained in SB 102. HB 412, SB 55. HJR 22, and
HB 650 last surnmer. This political patchwork is not what Ohio's children or taxpayers need. It is opposed by the Oh10 School 'Boards Association, the Buckeye
Associatton of School Admmistrators, the Ohto PTA, and the OhiO Cnahtton for
Equity and Adequacy. I will vote NO on Issue 2 and urge my elected representatives to make pubhc educatiOn -- from preschool through college -- a htgher
pnority.
Rosemary H. ToUiver
Director of
Curriculum and Instruction
GaUipolis.

.

,

•

Urges 'no' vote on Issue 2

Support senior citizens levy

Ohio/W.Va.

•
Aprll21, 1998

PageA4

programs

I

WEST YlltGINIA

Daily 3: 7-4-4 '
Daily 4: 0-5-9.0
CQSh 25: 7-14-19-21-23·24
"

State to a Unltad Auto Workers picnic In
Springfield, followed by bowling in Chillicothe,
and a rally and Jefferson-Jackson Dinner In
Athens. (AP)

Endorsed Democrat candid·ates
travel together throughout state
By The Associated Pre11
The Ohio Democratic Party 's
endorsed candidates are hit the road
together lor a two-day campaign
swing through Ohio.
"We are trying to go to communities that most politicians don't get
to very often." pany Chairman David
·Leland said during the group's tirst
stop on Friday. at Central State University in Wilberforce.
"It is an opponunity for Democrats to meet people up close and personal." he said.

The candidates went from the
school to a Uni!ed Auto Workers picnic in Spnnglield, tollowed by bowling in Chillicothe and a rally and Jefferson-Jackson dinner in Athens.
On Saturday. they planned to visit New Philadelphia and then attend
rallies in Akron and the JeffersonJackson dinner in Medina.
All statewide candidates except
for U.S. Senate candtdate Mary
Boyle and Ohto Supreme Court Justice Frdncis Sweeney were on the trip
Friday. while all but Sweeney and

attorney general candidate Ri chard
Cordray were expected to be on the
campaign trail Saturday.
Leland said the trip allows voters
to see the candidates are u committed team representing working famtltes.
"This is the kmd uf unity we 'are
demonstrating throughout the campaign year." he said.
But what voters are really "hearing from the candidates ts the same
old Democratic mantra ... said Gary
.Abernathy. spokfsmun for the Ohio
Republican Pany.

COLUMBUS CAP)- Welfare
advocates admit federal ~d tape
can be a hassle. but for $88 million
they think the state should overlook
the head:~ches .
"Why is the state turning down
money"" asked Pam Argus. asso·
ctate director of the Coalition on
Homelessness and Housing in
.
.
Ohio.
Gov. George
Voinovich
announced April 17 that Ohio
would no longer be seeking an $88
BATAVIA (AP) - A motorist's on April 12. Vosseberg became upset state 275 wouldn't move to the right
million federal welfare-to-work rage at another driver who wouldn't that a vehicle in the fast lane of Inter- so he could pa.-.
grant. Voinovich said
move out of his way could land him
of providing job training for hard-. in jail. jl~thorities said.
MARSHALL-BROWN
to-place welfare recipients.
Frdnk J. Vosseherg. 39. or CincinBut Judith Bird. chairman of the nati. had been scheduled to appear
Have a Hean Ohio coalition. said Thursday tn Batavia Municipal
it is a mtstake to decline money Coun, about 25 mtleseastofCincin·
For 4th District
desptle the red type.
nati. But the ca.'&lt;! was moved to Cler·
•·[ do think these (labor Depan- mont County Common Pleas Court,
menl grant) programs are overreg- where felony cases are handled.
ulated," Bird said. " But my
Vosscberg, who wa.• charged with
drqthers would be to take the mon- second-degree felonious assault.
Marshall Brown
• 36 years as an attorney
ey and he creative."
could' be sentenced to eight years in
• Twice elect,e d Municipal Judge
Voinovich says the labor mon- , prison and fined up to S 15:000 if conJackaon County • Endorsed by Jackson Co. Bar AssOC:
ey would require Ohio to set. up u victed, authorities said.
I
Paid 101 by Oouthen For COlJrt ol Appeals,
Municipal
Judge
seJlllrate program duplicative of
The State Highwar Patrol said that
, lres 1~ W Soulh St , Jactson.·OH 4564G
Ohio Works First. the job training
initiative that is pan of the general welfare program the federal
Realer Ads In ~ Section
government handed to statoos in
Prepml'w........led By Contraa Advertismg. Inc.
1996.
() 19981\11 Rights Resetved.
Instead of taking the money and
launching a welfare-to-work initiative guided by Depanment of
Don Saxon, Owner
.
Labor rules and regulations. Ohio
Remodeling is today's affordable answer to c~g lamily needs, and the craftsmen at Morning Star .Construction,
will use surplus money from the
located
in Gallipolis a~92 Burnett Road, are remodeling specialists. This contractor is weU-recognized in this area lor firM quality
new welfare program. Tempomry
workmanship and reasonable rates.
.
.,
. .
Assistance to Needy Families.
No maner what kind of home improvements you need_done, whether tt sa new roof or you need_yow enure home rem_odeled, Mornlnc SlarConltructlon has the experience and ability to handle the JOb pmpeny. f!tey spcc1ahze mall types of s•dmg,
rl'!Jiacement windoos, mom additions, bathioom and ~tch~n ~modeling, decks and patJOs. and other h.ome repatrs.
make a point of hiring master craftsmen who take pnde m thetr work so that you can be assuml or a professiOnal JOb. Mo1111111
Star Construction uses only hiRhquality materials. and completes theoork m the shortest ume posstble. AD workers are crNered
by Workers' Compensation and liability insurance for your protection,_ ,
When you have a job that calls for a general contractor, caJl MorningStar Construction at 446-9406.They will gtve personal
attention to your project and help work out all ol tbe plans wtth accurate cost estunates. CaD tnday and lei them get stantod on
INSURANCE
-· beautifying and increa.ing the value 1&gt;f your home.
.
Full Une of
_ tri1urance Proctucte
+ Flnenclll
Family Owned &amp; Operated
Service•
Rio General Hatdware &amp; Supply,located in Rio Grande at 257West CoUege ~reel, phone 245-9745, has become known as
the do-it-yourselfbeadquarters in this community. Whatever yow hardware reqwremems may be, you are sure to fmd what you
AGENCIES, Inc.
want at this weD stocked store. They feature hand tools, electrical and plumbing fiXIwes, fencing supplies. kitchenware, lawn
and
ganlen supplies and much more, all at very reasonable prices. These and many other types ol men:handise are offettod in a
, Bill Quickel 992·6677
wide variety of colors, sizes and grades. Look to them for yow fann and feed supplies in the near future.
Sooner or later, all of us must patronize a hardware store for something we need. At Rio General Hanlware II Supply, the
service is always courteous and quick. &lt;ind you can count on their help in ~lecting_the most appropria~e items for any appli~a­
tion. Whether you'~ building a cabinet or staining the .badvartl fence, therr ~eneed personnel willassJSt ~ou tn selecttng
the plllper tools and supplies. The management of this wefi-~ted store~ to !eel that tts good reputation ts ba":-d on
personal service as weU ao; durable hardware item~ They~ o~er livestock hauling, .
.
Quality name bran~roducts, sensible ooddng mans pnces and supenor semce are three great reasons to rely on Rio
Geneni ll11nlwud• Su
lor all your hardware needs. Stop in soon!

Enraged motorist may /an~ in jail

DOUTHETT

·Court of Appeals'

DOUTHETT

BUSINESS .

Morning Star Construction

'"!cy

Davis·Quickel
Ag_ency Inc.

Rio General Haroware &amp; Supply

AAA Drivers' Education School

Lottery results
By The Alloclated Pre11
l'he following numbers were
.elected in Friday's Ohio and West
· Virginia lotteries:
.
OHIO
· Pick 3: 9-3-6
Pick 4: 1-0-4-8
_
Buckeye 5: 1-4-7-8-31
There was one tkkct sold listing
ali five numbers drawn in Friday
,night's,.Buckey'e 5 drawing, and it is
wonh S 100.000. the Ohio Lottery ·
·said.
.
The winning ticket was p~rch~
at Discount Drug Man No. 21 •n
'cleveland.
The~ were 182 Buckeye 5 tickets
·with four of the numbers. and each is
,worth $2~- The 4.804 tickets showing three or the numbers are each
worth SIO. and the 44,902 tickets
Showing two of the numbers are each
worth $1. ·

TOURING DEMOCRATS- Democratic can·
dldatea for state 'otflca, Including gubernator·
lal hopeful Lee Fisher, center, toured the campus ol Central Slate University In Wilberforce
on Friday. The candidates went from Central

Over 20Years Of Experience In Driver's Education

Kall Burleson, Kent Shawver, Carolyn Casey,
Hilda Tirado, Jan Betz.

·we,

the' Gallla County Children's Services
Board, charged with the operation of both the
Children's Services and the Children's Home,
strongly encourage you to vote YES for the
operation levy on May 5.
·
The cost of% mill levy Is approximately $8.75
a year on a t~x evaluation of $50,000. This Is
equal to a can of pop every two weeks!
Please help be a responsible community
member and help provide for the SAFETY ot our
children.
Paid for by All

Kids Count, Jeft Smith, T~eas. 22 Edgemont . Galipolls: Ohio
'

AM Driven Educadon School is located in Gallipolis at 360 Second Avenue, phone (740) 446-0699 or 1-800-285-1217.
and in l'llmeroy at Meigs Museum on Butternut Street. This driving school olfers driver's education built upon mndem ideas.
Thoroughly tiained instructors give you scientifJCally plarmed instruction which saves you time and money. They provide
special care to the nervous and also olfer day and Wl!ekend programs for defensive driving.
·
· An investment in driving lessons is an lnvestroenl in yourself that will pay real dividends in luture years. To get anywhere
in this modem ¥. one must know how to &lt;~Jive, Yllu will do weD to phone MA Driven Ed11cation School and let them assist
iil learning 10 drive.
you MAOrlvenF.dtJCIIIoo School has been a leader in advancing the drivingsblls of this area. Graduates of this school should
have no trouble seauing their driver's Uceme. and all are eligible for 1u.ver inSWllllCe rates. They ;q-e fully insuml and use only
late rnodel dual control autonwbiles for your safety. Under their inslruction, you'U he driving in no time at all. Call
(740) 446 06119 or 1.aJ0.285--1217 for more infonnation.

Scenic

N~ing Center, Inc.

.

·

.

One of the most diftlcult dedsions for any family is placing a loved one in a nursiJ1 home. They want the assurance that ,
their family member wt11 be receiving quU!y titedicaf care and an oppoiiUJilty to con1iniJe their lives with 11\le meaning.
\
Sc:en{e ... ~ Catler, located in Gallipolis at 311 Budridl!l! ROad, phooe 4411-7150, was designed to provide 1
comfort, safely and a home-likea:a for the elderly and theconvalescem. In the company of companions the same age,
your kMd one wiD have the
10 l!lpelience plarmed ~activities and m:reationai ~seared to their inter·
ests and abilities. Their team o qualified professionals piOI'Ide 24-hour nwsing care and rehabilllative therapy witb pe!SQIUI(, "
ized altenlion to each resident With a aeriatric medical director and speda(ly trained Sial, Sanlc Ia. ~Center also, ,
olfen a soeclaUY secured Alzheimer's unit to meet the special needs ofihe Allheimer's patient with personalized anention. ~ . ,
Scenlt Hilla Nuilq Calm, both private and semi-private Medicare or Medicaid app~ rooms are availal!le, and wonde~
home-cooked mealS are~ dail)\ Special diets are carefuUy adhered to and the facility is equipped with modern fire aiaim
ems to ensure the
of their tisidents.
·
l
~ Scealc U. Nunlnl
invites you to \isit their~ facility when you are faced with the decision of choosing nursing
or Alzheimer's care for your loved one.
.
.
•

•

�•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

J

Sunday, Apri126, 1998

Cases concluded in County Court session

-

POMEROY - The following costs: Tummy S. Blouin, Long Bot- plus costs; marked lanes. costs only: mire. Jacksonville. Fla.. speed, $30
cases were seuled la.'l week in the tom.' expired OL, $50 suspended to Denzel Prater. Pomeroy. speed, $32 plus costs: Edricess Kurr, Rutland.
Meigs County Court ofJudgc Patrick S25 plus costs; disorderly while plus costs: John F. &lt;&gt;•nter. Racine. speed. $30 plus costs: DonnaR. Sto·
bart. Rncine, stop sign. $20 plus
H. O'Brien.
imDlicated. costs only;
failure to control. $10 plus costs;
costs:
Michael E. H1 cks. Athens,
Fined were: James D. White, MidJohn C. Philyaw, Ravenswood,
James D. Whobrey. Cheshire.
LETART. W.Va. - Charley R. Ball, 57. Letart, died Thursday, April23.
dleport. seal belt, $25 plus costs: W.Va., reckless operation, $100 P,lus DUI. $850 plus co"'· one year OL speed and seal bell. $65 plu ~ costs;
1998 in Pleasant Valley Hospital. ·
David R. Jenkins. Zanesv1lle. seal
Born July 14. 1940 in ~tart, son of the late Dalla' W. Ball , and Marie George H. Warner, Pomeroy. seal costs: improper backing. costs only; suspension. 30 days jail suspended to
belt, $25 plus costs: Jason A. Riggs. Harry W. Pickens Jr.. Racine. DUI, 10 days, one year probation; no belt. $25 plus costs: Earl H. Gilkey.
L. Grimm Ball of Letart. he was a farm worker.
Survivinu are a sister. Judy V. (Curtis M.) Hunt of Letart; two brothers, Racine, speed. $30 plus costs: Clay $850 plus costs, 10 days jail sus, headlights, costs only: Shawn M. Pomoroy, axk overload, $ 1:15 plus
William L. (Elaine S.) Ball and Don K. Ball. both of Letart; and a niece and T. thle. Rutland. assured clear dis- pended to three days. 90-day OL sus- Engle, Portland. .seat belt . $25 plus costs: Jason L. Runyon. Pomeroy.
lance ahead. $20 plus costs; Travis A. pension. one year probation. jail and costs : Ernest M Roach. Pomeroy. seat belt. $25 plus costs; Carolyn R.
nephew. great nieces and greur nephews, and a step-nephew.
Services w1ll be .I :30 p.m. Sunday in the Letart Asbury Methodist Church. Hawk. Athens. speed. $30 plus cosl" $550 suspended upon completion of driving under FRA suspension. $150 Goodman. Galhpolis. seat belt. $25
with the Rev. Rex Young officiating. Burial Will be in the Evergreen Cen;e· James R. Titus, Syracuse, assured reSidential treatment program: left of plus cosls. three days Jail and $75 plus costs; G. Keith Klein. Pomerny.
tery. Visitation was held in the Foglesong Funeral Home. Mason, W.Va., on clear distance ahead, $30 plus costs: ·center.. costs only; Kenneth L. suspended if valid OL presented seat bell. $25 plus eosls: Kimberly C.
Rhonda F. Neece, Apple Grove, Burchell. Flem1ng. driving under withm 90 do,ys. one year probation: Sellers. Portland. seal bell. $25 plus .
Saturday.
·
W.Va .. speed. $30 plus costs: Michael financial responsibility action sus- David J. Torres, Lancaster. reckle« costs; Chnstopher Hall. Sherman.
E Pooler Jr.. Reedsville, seat belt. pension, $200 plus costs. seven days · operation, $100 plus costs. $400 for· W.Va .. speed. $30 plus costs: Rhonplus costs; Reba 'V.1illis, Racine, jail· and $100 suspended if valid OL feilure: left of ce nter. cos ts only: da L Moon. Pomeroy. seat hell. $25
GALLI POLIS - Norma Berry. 82. Gallipolis. died Thursday. April 23,
$eed, $30 plus costs: Mark C. presented withm 60 days. one year Johnnie K. Harrison, Pomeroy. DUI, plus costs: Pamela M. Theiss. Syra1998 in St. Mary's Hospital. Humington. W.Va.
•
Theiss. Racme. stop sign. $20 plus probation: following lo closely. $10 $1.000 plus costs. six months pi I sus- cuse. seal belt. $!5 .plus cosb; L~on
Born Feb. 27. 19·16 in Gallipolis, daughter of the late Chauncy J. Ch~ek
cost~: Kenneth L. Smith, Racine, stop plus costs: Brian Arnold. Pomeroy.
pended to 30 days, one year OL sus-· V. 1-lutchinson, Ch~shirc. seal bell.
and Mary Calhoun Harrison. she was a homemaker. and a member of Grace
sign, $20 plus costs; Michael E. Jet'- disorderly conduct, $20 plus costs: pension. o_ne year P.robation. 180-day $25 plu,&lt;cosls: Chester A Md:tdlan.
United Methodist Church.
.
ferson, Columbus, speed, S48 plus Dav1d A Reeves. Pomeroy. DUI. veh1cle 1mmob1hza11on : dnvmg Middleporl. seat belt and failure 10
She was also preceded in death by her husband, John C. Berry.
costs; Shawn W. Michael, Pomeroy. $850 plus costs. 10 days jail sus· under suspension. $150 plus costs. dJSpl&lt;~y valrd registratiOn. $25 plus
Surviving are thrt!&lt;! sons. John L Curter.of Leonard. Md .. James C. Carter
ATV on public roadway. $20 plus pended to three days. 90-dny OL sus- six months jail suspended to 30 days costs; Robert W. Stumbo. Pomcmy.
of Racine. and Charles W Powell of Galhpohs; five grandchildren and SIX
·costs: Julie A. McGuire. Langsville. pension. one year probatiOn, jail and · concurrent. one year probation:
stop sign. $20 plus costs: Rachel F.
great•grandchildren; and a sister. Gail Spr?gue of Vinton.
.
speed. $30 plus costs. Chad T. Mor- $5~0 suspended upon completiOn of
Benjamin C. Kauff. Syracuse. Robinson. Rutland. scat bell. $25 plus
Services will be I p.m. Sunday 1n the W1lhs Funeral Home. wuh the Rev.
rison. Parkersburg. W.Va .. speed. res1den11al treatment program; no DUI. $550 plus costs. 90-day OL sus- costs; Tr:.ll'l Caslo, Rut:lnt!. failure tn
David Hogg ofticiating Burial will be in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
$30 plus costs; Shannon L. Walker. OL. $150pluscosts. IOdaysjuil sus· pension: 10 days jail suspended to control. $20 plus costs.
Visitation was held in 1he funeral home on Saturday.
Pomeroy, left of center. $20 plus pended to three days concurrent. one three days. one year probation : seat
Wi IIi am E. G,ibbs. Rutland. speed
costs;
year probation; left of center. costs bell. $25 plus costs; left of center. and sc'll belt. $5X plus costs: William
Milford C. Wyant, Albany. over- only:
costs only; J~son D. Swiger. Gahan- J. Flaisig. Ponland. seal belt. $15 plus
width. $20 plus costs: David W ProfBettina J. Hill. Racine.J:1UI. $850 na, speed. $30 plus costs; Jeffrey B. costs; Eric F. Gould, Portland. unscIRONTON - Patric.a Mary Johnson. 55. Ironton. died Thur&gt;day. April fill Jr.. Racine. stop sign, S20 plus plus costs, 10 days jail suspended to Smith, Tuppers Plains. speed, $30 cure load. $20 plus costs: Rodney D. •
23. 1998 in Gullipohs. .
·
·
costs: Betty P. Caldwell. Middleport. three days. 90-days OL suspension. plus costs; Albert D Delong, Mur· · Hines. Pomeroy. seat bell. $25 plus '
Born Aug. 22. 1942 in Lawrence County. daughter of James Clark and speed, $30 plus costs; seal belt, $25 one year probation. jail and $550 sus- raysville, W.Va .. seat belt. $15 plus costs: Dana R. Deem, Wilkesboro.
Genevieve Zwilhng Riley. she taught elejnentary school from 1964 to 1971 plus costs: Michael R. Stewart. pended upon completion of. residen· coSts: Preston G. Mustatd. Jackson . N.C., spt!&lt;!d. $30 plus costs; John D. ;
at the Green and Pedro schools.
Cheshire, driving under the intluence, tiullteatment progmm':Jeft of center. speed. S30 plus costs; Gregory J. O'Donovan. Charleston. W.Va.'. •
She was a member of St. Mary's Catholic Church at Pine Grove.
$850 plus costs, 90-day operator's costs only: Jason E. Counts. Syra- · Fiedorczyk. New · Middlestown. speed. $30 plus costs: · William A. ,
Surviving in uddiiion to her parents ure her husband. Alfred L: Johnson: license suspensiOn, 10 days jail sus- cuse. speed. $25 plus costs: Connie speed. $::!0 plus costs: George H.
Schulll Jr.. Pomeroy. seal bell. '$25 ;
four daugh1ers. Susan Michelle Johnson of Ironton. Amy Marie Johnson of pended to three days. one year pro- A McDaniel, Middl.eport. $850 plus Warner. Pllmeroy. seat hell. $25 plus
plus costs;.Ginger L. Campbell. Long
Cincinnati. and Heather Dawn Johnson and Nicholee Anne Johnson. both of bation.juil and $550 suspended upon costs, 10 days jail suspended to three costs; James D. White. Middleport. Bonom. seal bell. $25 plus costs:
South Point three sons. Steven D!&gt;minic Johnson of Portsmouth, and Thoma.&lt; completion of residential treatment days. 90-day OL suspenSion. one seal hell. $25 plu' costs: Marcia J. Vanessa L. Kaukonen. Pomeroy. seal I,
Joshua Johnson and Michael Todd Johnson. both of the home: and a grand· program; Timothy A. McClure. Mid- year probation. jail and $550 sus- Thornas. The Plains, seat belt. $25 bell. $25 plus costs; Ronn1c J. Jeffers · /
.;on.
dleport, speed. $25 plus costs; Edgar pended upon completion of reSJden- plus costs; Ed1th Merlmo. Athens, Jr.. Point Pleasant . W.Va .. seal bell. '
She was also preceded 1n death by one brother. F,ather William Riley
Padva. Columbus, speed. $32 plus lint treatment program: seat belt, $25 speed. $30 plus costs:
$25 plus costs: Robert R. Burgess. '
Serv~ces w1ll be II a.m. Monday in St. Mary's Catholic Church. w1th the
lames J. Raleigh, GermnnMown. Conageville: W.Va .. seal belt. S25 :
Rev. Fmncis Lee Kinney otliciating·. Burial .will be in the Pine Grove CemeMd .. speed. $30 plus msts: David J. plus costs. Paul C. 'Atha. Pomeroy, :
tery. Friends may call at the 0' Keefe-Buker Funeral Home. Ironton. from
Miller. Coolville. stop sign. $20 plus seat bell, $40 plus CQsls.
6-9 p.m. Sunday.
.
costs; Kelby M. Moore. Wnnhington.
A Vigil servic~ w1ll be held in the funeral hom.e at 7 p.m. Sunday.
speed. $30 plus costs, Br.mdce J.
. Obltu•rlll ,,.. p81d •nnouncomonto lrrongod by locol lun•r•l homn. Wimer. Belpre, speed. S30 plus costs:
.'
Obttuorleo ,,.. publloMcl •• requootocl to eccommodelo lhoee doolrlng moN Jeremy A. Kotot'f. Cmcinnall. speed.
lnlormotlon liNin Ia provkltd In tho occomp•nylng Dnlh NoUce•.
$30 plus costs: Travis R. Hale.
ALBANY - Harold G. NorriS. 75. Pagev1lle Road. Albany. died Thurs•
McArthur. improper passing. $20
I •
day. April 23. 1998 in the Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Lexington. Ky.
plus cnsts; Janel Ambrose, Pomeroy,
Born April 13. 1923 in Franklin County, son of the late Waller and Edna
seal bell. $25 plu,, costs; Tracy A.
Merle Barnhill Norris. he ~as retired from the c11y ol Athens Wastewater
Hanson. Chesapeake. speed. $30 plus
POINT PLEASANT. West Virginia - Henry Wa(d Beecher "Bee" Hill.
Treatment Plant.
1
cosiS; P&lt;Jula A. King. Pomeroy. winHe was a U.S. Army veteran of Worlll War II, chief of the Scipio Town- 84, of Point Pleasant. West V1rginia. d1ed Thursday. April 23, 1998 at his res- dow lint." $30 plus costs: Alan L.
idence.
~hip Volunteer Fire. Department for 12 years. a life member of the Albany
Hillard. Lillie Hocking. seat belt. $25
Henry was born December 21. 1913 in Leon. West Virgm1a. He was retired plus costs; Kenneth E. Schrum .
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9893, and the Pomeroy Amencan Leg1oli.
Surviving are wife. Rhea Jean Reaves Norris; four sons. Michael Norris. from Foote M1neral. with 17-112 years of service. He was a member of the Boone. N.C.. speed. $30 plus costs;
address unknown. Raymond !Christine) Norris of Milton. Fla., Kenny Nor- Brighten Methodist Church.
He is surv1ved by his wife of 61 years. Mary Agnes Morns. Also surviv- Ronald R Bachtel. Pomeroy. seal
ros of Marion. and Harold Guy Norris Jr. of Pagevi11e: two daughters.
belt. $25 plus costs:' Jal)les T. ChapDawnette tJeffrey) Welch of Rutland. and Darla !Ronald) Haning of Pomeroy: ing are nine children who loved him very much: Henry "Sonny" Hill of Addi- man . .Aibun.r. seat belt, ~15 .plus .
son. Nita I Billy) Simmons. Della Thompson. and Denve,r (Janet J Hill. all oJ costs:
·and nine grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
Gallipolis. Wilma (Frank) Caldwell and Rita (Dick) Shriver. both of Bidwell.
He was also preceded in death by two grandsons.
Michael C. Lykins. Parkersburg.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home, Mary (James) i&lt;imberling and Marilyn (Rick) Cheesebrew. both of Poin1 W.Va .. speed. $30 plus cm1s: Jennifer
Albany. with the Rev. Marvin Althouse olliciating. Burial will be in the Rig- Pleasant. West Virginia. and Conni~ C~rtmill of Orlando. Florida: u grandL. Laudermill. Rutland. speed. $30
gs Cemetery, Pagevllle. Friends may call at the fune~al home from 2-4 and son, Steve (Melody) Hill of Point Pleasant. West Virginia, was ra1,sed i~ his plus ·costs: seat belt. $25 plus cnsts: •
WE NEVER
"
grandparent's home. ·
1·9 p.m. Sunday.
Jack F. King. Rutland, seat belt. $15
He is also sumved by two brothers. Dennos of Leon. West Virginia. and plus costs: Omnie Barthelmes; RulCOMPROMISE ON
Thomas of Plain City; and 25 grandchildren and 30 great-grandchildren.
land. seal belt. $25 plus cos(s: James
QUALITY
He was preceded in death by one sister. Flora Marie; three brothers. Guy. W. Hams. MidJicport. speed. speed.
Denver and Robert: four half-brothers. Moot. Brady, Dolph and Rufus; a
BUT OCCASIONALLY
Municipal
Coinmon Pleas
$30 plus costs; scat bell. $25 plus
Richard Paul Thompson: and a great-grandson. Jacob T. Russell. costs: Stephen W. Dunn. GallipoliS
grandson.
The following cases were recent,
The following cases were recentWE Do ON PRICE.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday. April 26. 1998 in the Leon Methodist Ferry, W.Va., slOp sign. $21) plus
ly resolved in Gallipolis Municipal ly filed in the Gallia County Common
Church. with the Rev. Kenneth Durst and the Rev. Herbert Buck oflic1a1ipg.
Pleas Court:
Court:
SPRING SALE
The
body will lie in state one hour prior to the service. Bunal will be in the costs; Nancy G. Phalen. New Haven . ·
Dissolution granted - Cindy
Christopher D. Slezak. 20. BidW.Va .. seal belt. $25 plus coSis:
NOW IN PROGRESS
well. charged wilh dnving underthe Fitzpatrick and Leonard Fitzpatrick. Leon Cemetery. Visitation was held in I he Raynes Funeral Home, Buffalo. Gregg A. Harris, Wilmmgton. speed.
West
Virginia.
on
Saturday.
April
25.
1998.
intluence. wu.s tined $450. three days no addresses available: Melinda S.
$30 plus costs: Raymond M. ReilPallbearers will be grandsons, Steve Hill. David H1ll. Mark Hill. Joey
jail. three years probation· and 180 Hoschar and Calvin L. Hoschar. no
addresses available; Cindy Sutphin Gibbs, Brian Gibbs. Larry Caldwell. Bruce Shriver. Chris Hill and TJ Hill
days l1cense suspension.
In lieu of !lowers. contributions may be made to the American Heart AssoKurtJSs L. Groves. 21. Vinton. and Brynn Keith Sutphin. hoth of
ciation.
dr the American Diabetes Association.
charged with reckless operation. was Cheshire.
Dissolution filed - Pamela R.
lined $450. twn days jail and two
HOME OXYGEN &amp; MEDICAL
years probation.
Lanier. Bidwell. and Ronnie L.
EQUIPMENT
Lan1er.
Vinton;
Diane
M.
Clonch
and
InsP. DaviS. 2023 Chatham Ave ..
• Hospijal Beds • CPAP/BIPAP
Gallipolis. charged with menacing. Herbert R. Clonch. bnth of GallipoALBANY- Harold G. Norris. 75. of Page ville Road. Albany. d1ed Thurs• Wheelchairs • Bathroom Aides
·
was lined S250 and six months pro- lis.
day. Apri123. 1998 at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Lexington, KenRENTAL • SAI£5 • SERVICE
Divorce granted- Becky Snider. lucky.
billion.
Free Delivery • Medicare •
Michael B. Myers. 32. 730 Third Bidwell. from Max Snider. ChilliBorn April 13. 1923 in Franklin Coumy. son of the lute Walter Norris and
Medicaid • 'Insurance
520 W. Main St. - Pomeroy, 0
Ave .. Gallipoils. charged with con· cothe: Timothy Shortridge, Thur· Edna Merle Barnhill Norris. he was retired from the City nf Athens WasteHome Oxygen Service
Phone 892·2588
tributing to the ddiquency of a man. frum Lenore Shortridge. 1605 water Treatment Plant.
70 Pirie 51 ' Gallipolii,,,,,,.,J40-~46-7213
Vinton
- 388-8603
minor. was lined $1 SO. three years State Route I61!. Gallipolis: Jimmie
He was u U.S. Army veteran of World War II. chief of the Scipio Town·
76! I.Maift, JodliGII .............. 740-216-74U
Gallipolis
- 446-0852
probation and I()() hours community G. Parker from Alma Jean Parker. no ship Volunteer Fire Department for 12 years. a lite member nf the Alllany
1ol
' "
""
addresses
available;
Jacqueline
S.
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post9893. and the Pomeroy American Legion .
service. ·
.
Cynthia H. Jones. 41 . Cheshire. Griftith from William T. Griffith~ no
He is survived by his wifi:. Rhea Jean Reaves Norris: li&gt;ur sons ani! a
charged with disorderly by intoxica- addresses av'ailable: Scou Bush from daughter-in-law. Michael Norris, address unknown, Raymond and Chnstine
tion. was' lined S50.
NorriS nf Milton. Florida. Kenny Norris of Marion. and Harold Guy Norris
Rosa Bush. no addresses available.
Jr. of Pagev1lle; two daughters and sons-in-law. Dawnctte and Jeffrey Wdch
of Rutland. and Darla and Ronald Hanmg of Pomeroy; nine grandchildren.
Walter. Michael. Mark and Rhea Norris. Hollie, CurtiS and Austm Welch.
Heather Elam and Ronald Haning Jr.: one great-grandchild. Alicia Norris:
and an uncle. Edwin Barnhill of Columbus.
·CLEVELAND (API - Students assured their concerns were heard
In addition to his parents. he wu.' preceded in death by two grandsons.
at an inner-city high schnol have and would be forwarded to John M. Patrick and'Jason Norris.
made it clear: They want thelf prin- Goff. the state schools superintenServices will be Monday, April 27. 1998 at I p.m. in the Bigony-Jordan
cipal back.
dent.
.
,
Funeral Home in Albany. with the Rev. Marvin Althouse officiating. Burial
Hundreds of East Technical High
"We weren l able to walk put wnh will follow in the Riggs Cemetery, Pageville. Friends may call Sunday. April
School students marched three miles anything in writing. but we wanted to · 26. 1998 from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funer.d home. ·
Friday to the district offices m protest let them know we w1ll see this
of the suspension of Principal Terry through until the end." Denson said . .
===========~=========~
Rick Ellis, the district's commuButler. who was suspended after a
sl.ale investigation found he f!:Jd .l!ttn. ni!:liJieos director..said the students
staged an orderly, law-abiding
convicted of forgery.
The students carried signs and protest.
.
"You've got to admire the respect chanted "No Buller. no school!"
beneath the third-floor office of they h;ove for their principal." Ellis
said. "But the proce~s has 10 continSuperintendent James W. Penning.
Penning and his chief academic ue. We do have a problem.
We'ft only taking • 10'
"We are dealing witti stale laws.
officer. Livesteen Carter, met with
.student leaders Uriah Gjlmore. Jen- and it's not something you can just
,.Ople for thi.s
nifer Daily and Bra~ma Denson for igno~e. It had to be dealt with. I think
Terry understands that."
more than 30 minutes. •
~.,The su/dents said they were

Charley R. Ball

Norma Berry

·NatiQn/World.

"prlt 26, 111118

$'is

a

Patricia M. Johnson

-..,.--· Obituaries-

Harold G. Norris

Henry Ward 'Bee' Hill'

Gallia County ·court news

Harold G. Norris

• ,....._.. .,.p.~T-:

;:::::::::::::::::::::::~:---------------~~------------------~~----:;-------:~~------------~~-----;------------~;---:-~--~~--~~=-~~~~--- !

uriit tailure

m.ay ShO ..#en·
1 1'

l
t'"I lp
•
Shutt1e

CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla.
(AP) -A critical unit for removing carbon dioxide from space
shunle Columbia's atmosphere
shut down, forcing the astronauL~
to use a more complicated method
of cleansing the air.
If they cannot fix tHis main car·
bon-dioxide removal unit, the seven astronauts will have to cut short
their two-week Neurolab mis.sion
and return to Earth on Wednesday'
or Thursday, Mission Control
spokesman J~mes Hartsfield said
carty Saturday.
"However, the folks in here cer·
tainly don't believe the recyclable
system i~ definitely failed. , and
they' ve got a tot of options that
they're looking at right now that
could be responsible for the shut·

do~~~.;a!d~hnnce. certainl~·a

good charice, of restoring the recyclable unit."
Hanstield said the astronauts
were inno danger from the problem and the carbon. dioxide levels
always remained normal.
The carbon dioxide removal
unit shut down J·ust before mid. ht F 'd . tt ' 0 ff I
a arms.·
nlg
rl ~y• .se mg
1lle astronauts were ,still up even
lhough it wu.' pas~. their bedtime,
and Mission Control asked them to
switch to another set of electronic
controls and restart the unit. But it
shut down again.
. Flight controlle" ordered the
astronauts to mstall backup carbon
dioxide absorption cans. earned oor
every shuule mission just in case
the main system fails. These lithium hydroxide cans must be
replaced daily as they become sat·
urated.
Columbia was launched April
11 with 50 of ihese can&gt;. Since
thcn.lhe crew has used 2i of them
10 keep the level of carbon dioxide
in the shuule. ' laboratory lower
than usual for research purposes. ,
, '!'hat left 28 fresh cans a.• of early today. The crew will need 10 use
four cans· a day. which translates
Into a seven-day supply. Hartslii:ld
lillid. That includes live days of
ilormal operations- which would
last until late Wednesday or early
Thu~•day , -;:- ~ pi!:' ~ - two days
reserv~d for weather-related land·
ing delayS.
•
Columbia and its crew weren't
supposed to return from thi: qeu·
rological research mission until
May 3 or 4 - four or so days
,beyond the ~upply of lithium
. hydroxide cans. 1lle shullle does
not carry a full load of these cans
because of spoce ·limitations and
the length of this I(&gt;. to 17-day
mission. Hartsfield said.
After waking up Saturday, the
a.•tronauts told Mission C(\ntrol
they might be able to reuse !Klnte
'of the 22 opened lithium hydroxide cans, which have been set a'ide
and bagged. That could yield several more hours' wonh of carbon
'dioxide removal.
The fact that more than 2:000
'animals are flying on Columbia as
:test subjects cuts into the lithium
:hydro•ide supply by a few hours.
;Hartsfield said. Most of the ani·mals are crickets: rodents. fish and
'snails also are on board as part of
:various brain studies.
; Flight controllers scrambled to
;come up with possible repairs for
the astronauts to . auempt later

tOday.

Lawmak~r

By PAUL BARTON
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - If Congres.~
pushes tobacco companies too close
to the financial edge with a senlemenl
bill, the result could be disastrous for
tobacco farmers as well. a growing
number of observ'ers contend.
Sen. Wendell Fonl, D-Ky., is
'atreadywarnmg ofthe possibility thai
.Congress might record a "hollow
victory" against tobacco companies
this year by enacting a bill that dri·
ves them into bankruptcy:
That would leave no one left to
fund a $28 billion Ford-designed program to help tobacco farmers cope
with reduced demand and make the
transition to a new livelihood.
In fact. it would' also · mean no
funding for any of the other programs
that President Clinton and Congress
are counting on the industry to
bankroll.

warns of settlement's impact on farmers

Ford wa.~ jlmong those who voted
recently in the Senate Commerce
Comminee for n tobacco-seulement
bill developed by Sen. John McCain,'
R-Ariz .. now seen as the leading
tobacco bill in Congress. But Ford
supported it with some unease, his
office said.
Ford wu.s worried that the amount
of money the bill proposed to exlra.ct
from the industry- atlea~t S516 bitJio'n over 25 years- was beginning
to reach the piling-on level.
· Others are raising the question as
well.
· "I dori 'l know where the breaking
point is. but it seems they (Congress)
are searching for it," said Blake
begun," ~aid Scon Williams. an
industry spokesman at the Bozelle
Sawyer Miller Group. a public rei a·
lions firm in Washington.
"They both share an interest' in
surviving. and they are both threat·
·

that represents a break in~ point for dented," he said.
~
the industry is sti ll an open question .
The McCain bill calls for a $.1. 10
"I don 't have any way of gauging per pack increase .
that, and l am not sure anybody else
But the industry contends !he'
does." said.Kim Wallace, an analyst effect could be much higher - up to
at Lehman Brothers.
$5 per pack in added tax increases. •
Regardless, tobacco mdustry offiThat would lead to the creation nf
dais contend that farmers and the a black market - something else'·
industry will become increasingly American tobacco farmers should '
close allies as the tobacco issue .worry about.
winds through Congress this year.
That would create even more
"I think a bonding process hu.~ incen11ves for loreign tobacco prod·:
make companies more dependent on ucts to come into the country.
'
foreign tobacco growers to meet
"MeJico has a substantial ciga-&gt;
their export demands, Williams said. reu~ industry. You would certainly bel
Brown. the North Carolina Sl'ale concerned about that," Brown added.
economist. said contemplated export
Ohio Gov. George Voinovich ..
restrictions could lead to 30 to 40 per· chairman of the National Govercent reduction in demand for tobac- nors ' Association, said the Congresc(1 crups when combined w11h the sional Budget Office is now project-'
cigarette price increases called for by ing that the McCain bill would u~
the bill.
most produce $230 to $300 billion
"We are talking about increases in because it would lead to such a dracigarelle prices that are ~nprece- malic reduction in cigarette con- ·
sumption.
·

ened by the legislation in u substan·
tial way."
Last week, Williams. unended a
meeting in Charloue, N.C.• of tobacco industry offi&lt;*•ls and representa·
lives of farmers. "We need the growers' support to stop the legislation that
is moving through Congress." he said
of the, McCain bill.
Even if the b1ll doesn't bankrupt
them. industry ofticials .see other
developments thai should worry
farmers. especially export restrictions lawmakers a~ contemplating.
The McCain bill woold likely
Brown, agricultural economist at ,
North Carolina State University.
He added, "Obviously, If you go
beyond the' point of reason. nobody
collects the money, and ihat includes
the farmers."
tobacco companoes contend the
poinr of reason has already been
crossed. Others say the dollar ~gure

Autopsy: Ray (lied of liver failure
By TERESA M. WALKER
Associated Press Writer
The l1'ver
NASHVI.LLE· "'enn
'' · I rans PI an l James· Earl Ray sought
·
Would have e•iven him .a '~"ew more
Yea• rs· to trv' to prove he d1'dn't k1'll
Martl
, ·n Luther· K1'ng Jr" a medical
examl'ner •"ys
~ ..
Dr. Cyril Wecht observed Friday's
autopsy as a representative of Ray's

family. He said the 70-year-old Ray
h
appeared to have been in good healt
except for the hepatitiS that caused
cirrhosis of the liver.
"This is a very good candidate for
a liver transplant. and a liver transplant I think would.definitely have
given him life for who knows how
many years," said V,:echt. a medical
examiner from PittsbuJ11h.
,

Buy life·imurnnee and save
on your home and car.

TenneS'See officials refused to
grunt Ray a furlough tor the operation.

Ray died Thursday after 16
months of failing health. The autop·
sy sho~ed. a.~ expected, that he died
of liver failure caused by chronic
hepatitis ..
It failed to establish how he con·
tracted hepatitis.

•

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director for a replacement bin.

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Students take protest of principal's
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to try out new
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the media.
"My client has maintained all
along that he is innocent." said Murphy. "And I believe him."

BUFFET

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•

Mother of AIDS-.struck boy pleads for privacy
ST. CHA~LES. Mo. (AP) - The
His lawyer. Joe Murphy. called the
mother of a boy whose father alleged- conduct of the St. Gharles prosecutors
ly injected him with the AIDS virus outrageous, saying that Stewart had
said Friday her son is "doing better already been tried and convicted in
now" but that she realizes he will
eventually die of the disease.
The boy must be fed small
amounts of food frequently and must
take about I0. medications several
times a day. Despite that. she said, he
is trying to live u.s normal a lite ·as
possible. even going to school when
he is able. ·
.
·
The woman. idenritied only as
Jennifer. also pleaded for privacy at
a.news conference Friday. ·
"We are asking everyone to
respect the privacy and dignity of my
son and our family," she said.
The woman was escorted into a
meeting room by. St. Charles Co~n­
ly Sheriff's deputies, issued a brief,
tearful. statement and left, again with
police escort.s. She took no questions.
Police have declined to identify ·
anyone involved in the case except
Briao T. Stewart, the man'accused of
t
deliberately injecting his ll·month· ·
old son with AIDS-tainted blood six.
yea,rs ago.
- Polic~ said Stewart once told the
bny's mother not to worry about try·
ing to collect child -suppon because
the boy wouldn'tlive thai long. 1 1
The boy suffered a long serie~ of
serious illnesses. his mother said friday. and was near death at one time.
The boy1 now 7, was diagnosed with
full-blown AIDS in 1996.
,
"He is doing better now, thanks to
all our prayers and the lrealmcnl he
has received," she said. "But' we live
daily with the realization that he will
' die nf 1he disease or its complica·
tions. ••
County prosecutor Tim Braun said
he could not comment on any of the
•
evidenc~ poiK.-e may have gathered
ag;linsl Stewart. except to say that
there was enough to ~llow a judge to
issue a warrdrit for Stewart's arrest on
charges of first-degree assault.
Stewart is being held in the Coon·
ty Jail in lieu of S500.000 bond. He .
pleaded innocent to the charges in his
initial appeamnce in court.

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Ohio
1100( S..Shll6l.t/59...100

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�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Pege AS• .-...ax-.~

arts

Sunday,April26,1998

White House, GOP brace
for spending showdown
billion in back dues owed to the UnitByTOMRAUM
ed Nations unless Clin1on in tum
AAocilted Pre•• Writer
WASHINGTON ·- The Clinton accepts anti-abonion restrictions.
Budget Director Franklin Raines,
administration. bracing for an01her
in
a
letter to congr~ssional leaders
spending shQwdown with the Republican-led Congress. says il.may have made public on Friday. urged Conto Ia)· off thousands of civilian Pen- gress "to avoid actions that would
tagon ef11ployees if an emergency result in gridlock and be detrimental
spending bill for disaster relief at to our nation."
House and Senate negotiators
home and U.S. troops abroad isn't
were named earlier this week to hampassed by May I.
.Congressional leaders hope to get mer out the tina! version of emerthe measure to Presidenl CliJllon's gency spending legislation. The bill
desk by then - but not necessarily would provide relief to communities
hard hit by last winter's El Nino-driin the form he wants.
Republicans already have delayed ven storms and help the Pentagon
a vote on Clinton 's request for $18 replenish funds strained by deploybillion to help the International Mon- ments in Bosnia and the Persian Gulf.
"We urge (negotiators) to avpid
etary Fund weather the Asian fi nanactions that would result in gridlock
cia! crisis.
And a band of House conserva- and ihat would be detrimental to our
tives is threatening to further hold up nation," Raines said in his leuer.
"American economic a~d sec uriboth the IMI' money and nearly $1

Property reapp.raisal

.
'
IContlnued from A1)
ers about how high their ta•es will go.
· The January tax statements will also renect results of levies on the ballots in both May and November. According to the auditor. those levies. if
passed. will be collected on the basis.of the new value set in the reappraisal.
Tax issues on the May ballot will include two countywide levies - the
Meigs County Council on Aging. seeking a renewal of alive-year I mill levy.
and Carl~ton School/Meigs Industries, asking for a 1.8 mi)l permanent levy
in addition to millage already in effect.
Voters in the Southern Local School District will also vote on a 5.39 mill.
23-year bond and levy issue for construction of a new elementary school
building and renovations to the high school-building.
Warner said that "everything goes back to the tirst of January \998. and
becomes payable in 1999."
If real.estate values are increased by the reappraisal and new levies are
passed, it follows that real estate owners will see a considerable jump in their
ta•es. he said.
As for how property .-alue is determined. Warner said it is based on' "com,· parable sale to comparable property."
"Everything is based on sales in the county," he said. e~plaining that if
property is selling for more now than when the last value was set. then that
renects on surrounding'propenies. and results in higher taxes.
"We want to be as direct with the public as we can be about how taxes
will be afl'ected by the reappraisal. but we won't know that befoie VQters f!O
to the polls in May" said Campbell.
She did encourage property owners to visit her oflice once the valu'es have
been determined to find out just how they will be affected . . "Mistakes are
sometimes made." she said. "and it's up to the appraisal company and my
office to defend those values if a taxpayer raises a. question."

Touting home upkeep:
IContlnued from A1)
er's engine works no harder than necessary - and makes a neater cut --;
is to keep its cutting blades sharp.
Dull mower blades cause the ·
engine to work harder; causing the
engine . to force the blades through·
grass. instead of easily cutting it,
Baker e•plained.
_
Combs sai~ to sharpen the blades
at least three times during the mo~­
ing season. "If your mower has
grease fiuings. keep them well
greased." he added.
Baker has been repairing small
• engines for about ~2 years. including
10 years in Meigs County. ami noted
• today's lawn mowers and lawn trac: tors are becoming more sophistical' ed. designed fo be less polluting than
their predecessors.
Baker said din is what kills more
mowers than anything else - din in

.

House and Senate GOP leaders
decided to delay a vote on the IMF
money until later this year in hopes
of speeding to Clinton next week a
stripped-down version of the bi II to
help states pummeled by last winter's
storms and noods ·and to pay for
keeping U.S. troops overseas.
Republican.&lt; want to avoid election-year· accusations from DemocrJts that the money is bogged down
in Congress. Clinton prolited politi-·
c'ally in two similar standoffs when
the Republicans forced a government
shutdown in 1995 and delayed disaster assistance to tlond victims in
)997.
Raines said "it would be disappointing and disturbing" if the U.S.
ability Ul respond to pressing domestic and international needs "were
held hostage to partisan politic.s in the
Congress...
The administration did not directly threaten a veto. although White
House ofticials in the past have suggested one was likely if Cong~ess
accepted a House plan to pay for the
emergency spending with cuts in
domestic programs- or if an amiabortion provision is .attached.
In a related dispute, e&lt;Higressional Democrats said Friday that Clintoo
would.carry out threats IQ veto a bill
that would link abortion restrictions
to payment of nearly Sl billion in
dues owed the United Nations,

DISTRICT WINNE~S- The Gallla Academy
High School Key Club brought home three trophies - Single Service, Overall Achievement
and Oratorical from the Ohio Dlelrlct 49th
Annual Key Club Convenllon. The students
who attended the convention Included, from

l ~ti~ ~ rr; il

~

left, back row, Jenny Fowler, Steve Roberta,
Heather Clifford, Casale Graham, advisor Barb
Shelton and Sean Brown: front row, Brandon
Laueter, Kla Ceaey, Klzma Simpkins, Summer
M1rtyn, Zack Ruff and Mett Snowden. Not pic·
lured was Nicole Battle.
·

Key Club makes sweep of awards .
IContinued from A1)
French Art Colony and school pro- .
jects.
The Key Club was honored with
banner patches for completing all the
recommended projects as slated
above.
''The achievement award sums up
that we are the best of the best," said
Key Club President Steve Roberts.
The oratorical award. granted to
Cassie Graham for her speech. "If
You Help Them Play," required a studl:nt to do a five-minute presentation
on a topic of its choi&lt;:e 10 present at
the conve~tion .
Graham, who is a freshman. spoke
about the need for not nnly young
children to get attention from parents
through activities such as play but
also for older kid' to get the same
amount of auentinn.
"When I was up there I had to
speak to over 1.000 people." said
Graham. "I was nervous, but.if you

.

-

the bauery. )le said.
According to Workman. the
biggest problem is often simply one
nf neglect.
.
"' ] .:.;... } - • • '"
eUI1Iollzed
"It's just where they've let them sit, .
=~~~Computer
Systems and
l..:hrilcelsuppon1
the gas varnishes up and gums up the
Prolenlonal Services ..,...,
carburetor," he said. "Come spring~==-=-----.:
time. the engine won't stan."
Impact C'!"'puters
"Just keep the oil changed and fil- •
•CustomBult
congratulates our ters cleaned," he said. "I see abuse.
.Conlputers
diny oil. diny filters. iliny ga• ...
"Grand Opening
neglect."
Bahama Cruise"
In addition to repairing small
•Networks
Winner,
engines. most small engine repair
Web Sit• DHig11
Rboada Ftab of
shops sell pans for the do-it-your• Oqphlc DHitln
selfer and sell new equipment.
•.Supplln
Ironically. although Baker fixes a
lot of lawn mowel'!l. he doesn't get ..,.•.., 11 cuse them very much; his wife usual~~~~~
ly takes rare of that. he said.
· 1740) •

(

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.,.up

and scored on Chris Stynes' single.
Dmitri Young doubled leading
off the rirth. advanced on Brei
Boone's sacrifice and scored on Ed ·
Taubensee ' s grounder.
NEW YORK CAP) - David
Yoshii (1 -1), the Mets ' 32-year
Weathers came back just in time for old rookie pitcher fr om Japan ,
the Cincinnati Reds.
allowed both runs and five hits,
· ·. ' One night after returning from his struck out five and walked three.
.f&lt;~ther's funeral , Weathers allowed
" I made an adjustment today ,"
six hits in eight-plus shutout innings Yoshii said thro~gh a translator. He .
Saturday as Cincinnati beat the New allowed four runs, including two
.~ork Mets 2-0, snapping a three- homers. in a n~rdecision against the
~arne losing streak.
Reds last ~aturday . " Last week I
· "It was e~sy to pitch today," ·was tipping my pitches. It was a bet'Weathers said. " I had the bles~ing tereffort for me, but we still lost."
.of my mother (Gloria) and my ";'ife
Red Sox 3, Indians 2
(Kclli) and I knew that this is what
At Cleveland, it was like watch.my father (Tom) would have wanted ing the Bret Saberhagcn of old, and
me to do.
· the Boston Red Sox of ... when?
"Wit~ all of that support, how
They've won six straight and 13
could I fail? What I really wanted ·to of 14. Woth a 16-6 record, they're
do was finish the game . Maybe I off to.their best start in, oh. 52 years.
· tried to hard in the ninth inning plus
With another strong outing from
I was gelling a.bit tired," he said.
· Saberhagen on hos remarkable comeWeathers (2-1), who has never back, the Red Sox beat the
completed a game or thrown a Cleveland •Indians 3-2 on Saturday.
shutout, was replaced 'by Jeff Shaw They go for a sweep over the
~fter walking John Olerud to lead defending Al . champions on
off the ninth . Shaw g.ot the final Sunday.
) o/ee outs for his seventh save in
While the faithful back in
1\Mle chances.
Beantown are no doubt waiting for a
''I'm finishing. off hitters more meltdown, the Red Sox· keep right
· this season thanks to working With on rollong.
G~lly (Don Gullet, Reds' pitching
"The only thing tliat keeps me
co~ch) . WheT\ I get to a 0-2 or 1-2 goin'g is gelling back to the postseacount I really try to get the strike- son, " ~ai~ 'Saberhagen (4-0), who
out," said Weathers, who had seven went stx onnongs and lowered his
strikeouts , including Rey Ordonez · ERA to 1.97. "I want to win another
with two o~ts and the bases loaded championship. I think we have the
in the founh.
makeup on this ballclub to do it."
"In the past I have had a problem
"Shhhh!" they are saying in
·in trusting myself. No longer. Now I Irish pubs all over Boston: "Don 't
just throw what I have ac·ross the jinx us!"
.
plate and things arc going good," he
Truth be told, the Red Sox arc
·said.
playong as well as any team in baseCincinnati went ahead in the sec- ball. They beat the Indians for the
ond inning when Masato 'Yoshii fifth time in si• game,s, incl4ding
w~~~~~d Jon Nunnally, took third on three of four at Fenway last week,p
Reese's check-swing single end.

are using that talent."
The Red So• , who have JO
homers in 22 games, might have had
a more comfortable lead if not for
the sparkling defen se of Omar
Vizqucl, who extended his errorless
streak to 56 games. The Gold Glove
shortstop held counterpart Nomar
Garciaparra at third and threw out
John Valentin on a grounder' with the
infield drawn in , then ended the
first -inning rally wiih a diving stop
and force play.
.
In the second, he dived to his
right for Bragg 's grounder in the
hole, popped up and fired to first.
Bragg made a diving catch near
the rigM-field line on Berroa's nl
ball to 'end the founh .
·
Colon ( 1-1) went six innings.
allowing three runs anp seven hits
with two walk' and six strikeouts.
,
Orioles 8, Athletics 2
At Baltimore , Cal Ripken
stretched his major league recorcj of
consecutive games to 2,500 and
marked the occasion with a three
RBis Saturday as the Orioles ended
a two -game skid by beating t~e
Oakland Athletics 8-2.
Ripken homered on the night he
, tied Lou Gehrig ' s record of 2.130
successive ·games. He homered again
when he broke the mark one night
later on Sept. 6, 1995.
This time. he broke open a scoreless game with a 'two-run, oppositefield bloop single in the sixth inning.
He also had an Infield single with
the bases loaded in a five -run sev-.
enth.
· " I think luck played 'a lot into it
today." Ripken said . ' ' I got hjcky
and jammed the hall in right field.
and the other groundball had eyes
and went to right spot of the field ."
He admiued to having no special
recipe for success on days in which.
he reaches regal milestones.
"If you had the secret. you 'd usc
the same formula for every game,"
he said.
Ripken' s record-setting streak
began May 30, 1982, and is longer
than the ne~t 22 active streaks combined. Ben Grieve has Oakland's
longest current consecutive games
. ~,
,. streak at 44. ·
"I guess you can say that he's in
a league all by himself,'.' Oakland
manager 1\rt Howe said. "l don't
J sec it happening again, not in any of
our lifetimes."
On the night Ripken became
baseball's all-time Jroll Man. he
capped a grand celebration that
included an appearance by President
Clinton with an impromptu victory
lap. .
' ·
. This time, the ceremony was
decidedly s4bdued . The crowd of
46.026 gave Ripken a standing ova. tion for two minutes as the scoreboard nashed the numbers 2-5-0-0
oile at a time priQr to the sixth
inning. Ripkcn doffed his cap several times while standing at third base.
"It wa' eerie in a way. It took me
back 'to a few ·years ago,· ' he said.
:::,._,,..:;&lt;'l!.;:.;:..~.;,, ''~""".:"'::.:..1 . "One side of me is embarrassed, the
other side happy because I could
moments from '95."
·. ... relive
Ripken certainly didn ' t need a
•
lavish ceremony to mark his latest
milestone.·
·
Inning of SaJurday'a N1tlonal Laague game In
"Truthfully. I've gotten enough
New Yorll, where the Reds won 2-0. Ordonez fieldto last forever, or at least
auention
ed Barry Larkin'• grounder after the !Mil bounced
four
or
five
lifetimes," he said.
off Baerg1. (AP)

State Farm Life has the
slrength rating.from the following
independent rati~JJ -~ices:
A.M. Best - A++ .
Moody's- Ala

See State Farm Agent:
John K. Schmitt, Agent

ITAfl fAIM

342 Second Avenue, P.O: Box 906
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
011.: 614-446-4290 or 1888) 970-2345
Res.: 1614) 441-1420

INSUIANCI

Ill

State Farm Understands Life.™

.

Stale Farm Ute Insurance Company • Home Office: Bloomington,IHinola

the gas and in lhe! air tillers. doggin~

No closing cost No annual fee.

Wave

aew car, nalloa, fmly ballb. ADd die 'S •

Many people neglect even most
-simple maintenance. failing to check
•Ouid levels in the ~ngine . trJnsmission and a•les. and the water level in
(continued from A1)
· P,.oje~t. but residents must hear ihe
· cost of connect in:; their homes to the
nearest tap
These e•penS.:s ·have been the
: subject nf ohje~lions fmm a large
number nf · residents in Tupper.
Plains. many of whom have threat• ened to refuse to C(&gt;nncct to the new
system, whkh is nearing completinn.
'· unless the cost a&lt;S(!Ciated with con: nection is reiloced.
After rc:sidents or~aniud to chal, lenge the districl's requirements Ul
c&lt;Hint:et to the system. Commission. ers Jeffrey Thornton and Fred Hoffman attended meetings organized by
a group of resident.. and announced
the cummissiune111' plans t&lt;r seek
funding to a~sist those neec,Jing a.•sis-

.

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ci,.:IM.laltbe uii ••, ... sa
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Pacers beat ·Cavs
92-a-s to lead 2-0
in playoff series
By STEVE HERMAN
pared aM e•ecuiing well."
INDIANAPOLIS CAP) - The
The Pacers struggled with poor
Indiana Pacers expected struggle . shooti11g and poor defense early
and they got it.
,
before taking control in the third
After beating Cleveland by 29 . quarter.
points in the first game, the Pacers
Mark Jackson had eight as~ists
had to come from 17 points down on and eight points in the third period,
Saturday for a 92-86 victory and a 2- including two three -pointers that
0 lead in their best-of-five Eastern brought the Pacers within 57-53 .
Conference playorf series.
\ Cleveland, hurt by turnovers, man" We knew they were going to aged only three baskets over the ne•t .
come out with a lot of emotion," five minutes. Chris Mullin then hit a
said Rel!l1ie Miller, whose 18 points three-pointer - his only basket of
led six Pacers' in d~ble figures. But the game - to g&gt;ve the Pacers their
we didn ' t anticipate them hining first lead at65-63 with 2:38to go.
nine of their first 10 shots. That took.
Indiana led 69-67 starting the
us by surprise.
fourth quarter. Miller. who had only
"Our defense wa,n't all the way five points in the first half and 10
there early. They really beat us up in through three quarters, was fouled on
the first half," Miller said.
a three-point aucmpt and made three
The third game will he in free throws for a 72-67 lead. Shawn
Cleveland on Monday night. .
Kemp. who led Cleveland with 27
"To tell the truth. the real playoff points, brought the Cavaliers within
series· bcgi ns when you lose the · three before Miller hit a threc-pointhomecoun advantage." Miller said. , er to put the Parers up 77-71.
"Right now, we 're sitting nice. But
Indiana's higgcst lead wa' at 87Cievcland is throwing everything but 78 on a l'ast-hreak slam lly Jalcn
the kitchen sink at us. They' re pre- Rose with live minutes tu gu .

a

,\•

Suns beat Spurs 108-1 01, tie ·series 1-1··
By MEL REISNER
PHOENIX (AP) - The Phocnr•
Suns arc back in the thick of the
NBA playoffs after Antonio
McDyess made Tim Duncan look
like a rookie again.
McDyess had 2 I points and II
rebuunds and, more importantly •
limited ·Duncan to half of his Game
I scoring .output as Phoenix beat San
A11tonio 108-101 on Saturday to
cv! n a Western Conference playoff

series 1-1.
Duncan, the Spurs' sensational
rookie, looked like a playoff veteran
in Game I. scoring 32 points as San
Antonio won 102-96 on Thursday
night. On Saturday, Duncan had 16
points, IOrebounds and four blocks.
The series moves to San Antonio
for games Monday and Wednesday.
If a fifth game is needed, it will be
played May 3 in , Phocni~ .
Mark Bryant rebounded two

By ED SCHUYLER Jr.

Pal 'I" u.e af a rIt $40,010

..

GOING AIRBORNE - The Indiana Pacers' Reggie Miller (right)
takes flight in front of Cleveland torwtlrd Shewn Kemp to shoot in
the fourth quarter of Saturday,'s NBA flrst·round pleyofl g~me in
Indianapolis. The Pacers' 92-86 victory gave them a 2·0 lead· in the
beat-of·five sarias. lAP)

missed three-pointers in the last .hamstring pull.
eight seconds and convened them to
Avery Johnson•had 20·points and
four free throws as Phoenix p~t eight assisb in his ·second straight
away t~e ·spurs. George McCloud big game 'for the Spurs, and David
had 22 points. hitting his first six Robinson had 23 points and 16
three-point aucmpts.
rebounds.
. Rex Chapman. the Suns' leading . The Suns led hy up to 16 points
scorer at 15.9 points a game. had 16 in the thiul quarter and took an ,83points hut looked rusty in missing . 71 lead into the fuunh.
· nine of 15 shots . Chapman sat out
Robinson had two three-point
the last three regular-season games plays in the final J : 19 and scored 10
and the playoff opener bcc~usc of a points in the l&lt;1unh quuncr.

ln.d ian ~harlie; ·Favorite·Trick draw ·raves

'

The survey forms will he L'OIIJ·
· piled to determine how many of the
I'CI'ident~ qualify for LMI assistance.
liJl well lL'l how much money lhe
cilunty will rreed to seek. acconlins

••
'

Kentucky Der~ to stage 124th running Saturday

Jtlflll I , .

~

The sewer •y•tem, which will
affect over 100 households in the
c""munity of Tuppm Plain,, will
! lift 1 buildins ban lllat ha.~ been in
. pace Aince !he early 19705, and is
e1,.:tcd to prompu:onstruction and
' C\it11laMI1ic development in the Ea..lem
; Melt~ Ctlunty community.

.,llme.

........,....Biak...olorr..

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fAJui1ine IIIII' be Ill dalldllle

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I!Dii1 May 31,1998, atld- is 110 1111111:11 feel

enough air.

. uance.

..

" I think people have been overlooking us as • ballclub ,"
Saberhagen said. "Things might
begin to change, if they haven ' t
already ."
. .
Reggie Jefferson and Scott
Hatteberg hit solo homers to support
Saberhagen, who has won all four of
his starts after three years of arm
troubles.
Saberhagen, wbo already has two
AL Cy Young Awards and a comeback player of the year plaque ,
allowed one run·and three hits with
three walks and four strikeouts.
The 34-yea• -old right-hander
didn 't pitch at all in 1996 and made
only six starts last season. The Al ' s
comeback pla)er in 1987, can he do
it again II years lator?
"I'd like this .one to be my last, "
he said.
Kenny LDfton.. led off the eighth
with .a bunt single ore Jim Corsi ,'
stole second and scored on David
Justice's single to make ii 3-2. Jim
Thome and Geronimo Berroa nied
deep to center to end the inning. and
Tom Gordon pitched the ninth for
hos seventh save. ·
With Justice on second , Darren
lew,is had to spring deep into the
left-center alley to track .down
Thome ' s ball.
"That ball was scalded, " Red
Sox manager Jimy Williams said.
The Red Sox·, who started 18-3.in
1946. lOok a 2-0 lead on homers by
Jefferson in the third and Haneberg
in the fourth against Bartolo Colon.
Lofton made it 2-1 with his first
homer leading off.the fourth.
Jefferson hit a one-out double in
the fifth and scored on Troy
O'Leary 's single to make it 3- 1.
Colon struck out Darren .Bragg with
the bases loaded to end the threat.
" Boston is not lucky," Indians
manager Mike Hargrove said.
"They have a lot o( talent and they

i.

Standard I Podr'i-·AAA '
Duff &amp;Pllelpe .:.. AAA
Weise Relltii'Ch - A+

lmpic:,..__,..,

....

Club. Steve Roberts as· outstanding
can do that you can do anything."
The Key Club competed against president. Stephanie Mayes as outover 240 clubs statewide. comprised standing secretary, and Heather Clifof more than 11,000 members. ford as outstanding lieutenant goverGAHS also received special recog- · nor.
··11 is an hnnor to altend the district
nition for 50 years as a high school
convention
for three years and to
club.
.Besides being recognized with tro- come out strong each year," said Clifphies and a plaque, the Key Club also fnrd.
had , individual recognitions in its
~ivision, including: outstanding Key

.•.,.In

the carburetor. Also. people don't
· change t~il in their mower a' often
as they should.
"People are supposed to take the
' heads off and dean them every year."
he said. "Nnt many people dn."
• "One of the biggest pruhlems is
that people dqn't change their lilters.
, precleaners or spark plugs," Combs
said..Cnme springtime. their mowers
won't stan - they are nnt getting

\ ...

Section

Reds ·blank Mets 2-0; Indians lose

ty interests will suffer badly if the
presidenfs rc4uests are not promptly enacted into law," Raines said. "A
number of programs will be impacted" if the bill is not signed into law
by May I.
In addition to slowing aid for disaster relief programs in ·up to 16 .
states, the delay would force the Pentagon to stan "e•t~nsive cost-cutting
actions" to help defray the cost of
keeping troops in Bosnia and the Persian Gulf.
··The Defense Department is
developing a contingency plan which
could result in tens of thousands of
civilian furloughs. ranging in 'ength
from days to weeks," Raines said.
House and Senate negotiators are
working to resolve differences
between the $3 billion House version
of the legislation and a $5 .billion Senate version.

•

•

•

I:OUISVILLE. Ky . (APl- There will .be
sol)lcthing new in this year's Kentucky Dc'rby,
hut once the gate opens the ·race should be like it
is almost every year - a heart-pounding charge
iro which talent often needs the strong support of
luck.
The .:ast for the I 24th Derby on Saturday,
Ma~ 2 is an especially rich mix of speed horses,
~middle-of-the-pack horses and stretch runners. It
is a great betting race.
·
Among the cast in what is shaping up as a 17horse field are an unbeaten colt and a Horse of
the Year.
·
Indian Charlie is undefeated in four starts. And
Favorite Trick •.who won the honor as a two-year. old, will be·only the second Horse of the Year to
run in the Derby. The first was Secretariat in
1973. .
· The new wrinkle will be the post-position
draw, which will be held from S-6 p.m. EDT
Wednesday on ESPN.
· In previou1 years; the number drawn for a
horse specified the post position. This year, howe~er.lf a·borse chwio No. l, ~ DICIIIIS his ~IICIC­
ti&lt;?ns will have the lhird pick as to what pos1 position they want.
.
'
·
: "It's still luck," said Bob Baffen, trainer of
· lft!lian Charlie and Real Quiet, 1-2 finishers .in the

Santa Anita Derby .
three times last year.
"I don't think it matters.' ' Nick Zito said. Zito
The )lpset earned Victory Gallup :o trip ·tu
trains Blue Gra•s Stakes winner Halory Hunter. Kentucky . Irish-bred lianuman Highway. sccund
who~ principal owner i~ Rick Pitino. coacjl of in the Arkansas Derby. also is heing pointed In
the NBA Boston Celtics.
•
the Kentucky Derby.
While there will be several proven three-yearIndian Charlie, who raced only once as a twnolds in the field, there also 'will lie the usual sus- year-old because of shin pruhlems and a chipped
•
peels who make the Derby I!Oth interesting and ·llflkle. hurst upon the Kentucky Dc'r\ly scene in
•
•
crowded.
the Santa Anita Derby April 4. He stalked the
•
For instance, there is Nationalore, believed to pace. then took command in the stretch and beat
•
•
be histOI}';S richest maiden. The colt, bred, owned Real Quiet by 2 1141engths.
•
and trai·ned by Cho Myung-Kwan. a native of
Another un~atcn colt due to run in the\ Derby
South Korea, is winless in IS career starts, but he was scratched because of an injury. Event of the
•
has earned $283,767. Most of the money was Year. trained by Jerry Hollcndorfer, scored a 3
•
earned willl third·place finishes in the Breeders' 172-length win in the El C~ino Real Derby at
CliP Juvenile and the Hollywood Futurity.
Bay Meadows and a fivc-leltJ!h victOI}' in the Jim ·
'''Then there is Rock and Roll, whose owners, Beam March 22 at Turfway Park, but was
Madeline Paulson and Jenny Craig. want a Derby dropped from the Churchill Down field pn Friday l •"~'~
horse. Paul&amp;On is the wife of Allen Paulson, who when he broke a botle in his ript fniril knee dur·
raced the great Cigar. Craig runs an inteinalipnal ing a workout.
·
,
f
weight-loss business.
Of lhe 14 unbeaten horses to run in the Derby,
Rock and Roll·is trained by Bill Mott, trainer only two had less than four wins. They were the
of Favorite Trick. Moll also trained Cigar, who is filly Regret, first in 191~. and Thunder, fiflh in
retired.
1916, who eech had three wins.
Favorite Trick's winnins slreak was snapped
The only DerbY. willl more than one unbelteit
•
11 nine bHiis second stilt lhis year when he fin- . sWter was in 1963, when Candy Spot's finished
.
~.
ished third, behind Victory Gallop, in the lhinhnd No Robbery was fifth.
DERBY HOPEFUL - Indian .Chllrlle, _with Llrfy O.mon lUIIap :
,Arkansas ~rby. The loss, h'!wever, has nOI made
Unbellen Derby. winners hesideil Regret were elddle, ge,e tor an exerclla run with trelner Bob,lanert M,:
anybody consider Favorite Trick just an also-ran Morvich (1922), Majestic Prince (1969) and Ctturchlll DOwns In Loulevllle, Ky. The KMiucky Darby ......-......~ •
Saturday. (AP)
.
·
·
:
in the Kentucky Derby on a triiCk where he won Seattle Slew (1977).

.

,,
~

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.•

�•

..-Sunday, Aprll26,1~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

•
•"

Huskey helps Mets
get past Reds 3-2
NEW YORK (APJ - Butch
knows the hits will come.
Until then. he is trying to do what he
can to help the New York Mets win.
Huskey drove in the go-ahead run
with a grounder in the eighth inning
of the Mets' 3-2 victory 01•er the
Cincinnati Red s. helping Bobby
Jones get hi s lirst win of the year Friday night.
" I know I'm not tearing the cover off the ball, and until I do. I must
come up with the little things to help
' " ·sat'd Hus key, bat t'tng ·-~I~-·
us wm.
" It'~ about time me and the team got
rolling."
Jones 11 -2) was the Met s' ace last
season. going 15-9. but was winless
in his first three starts thi: year. ~le
allowed two run s and fi ve hits in
eight innings. John Franco pitched a
scoreless ninth for his lifth save.
"The fact that I hadn 't won yet
thb season never emered my mind."
Jones said. "We were only down by
a run. s6 I wasn't going to hatig my
head. My job is to give us a chance
to win . My rt&gt;cord is nol important.
The team winning the game is what
matters most ."
With Cincinnati 'ahead 2-1. Reds
starter Mike Remlinger walked Tim
Spehr opening the eighth. Jell Shaw
10-2) relieved with one out and g:tve
up a single to pinch-hitter Rich
Becker that moved the tying run to
~i~.
'
Edgardo Alfonzo singled. Bernard
Gilkey was intentionally walked and
Huske~

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'
~OU'RE THE MAN ! -That might have been' what Jackson head
co&amp;Fh Steve little (left) told Kyle Stacy as he headed home follow·
lng ·his two-run homer In the third Inning of Friday's SEOAL game
agil)nst Galli a Academy. Ttle lronmen hit ttlree other tlomers to mer·
cy-(ule the Blue Devils 11·1. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. .Spencer
Osborne)
·
'
·

Jackson cruises ·to
t1-1 win over GAHS
'

.

'
(iALLIPOLIS
- Four homers by tom of the sixth.
Jack-on in Friday's Southeastern
In addition to 'Curtis, Ervin· and
Oh-"' Athletic League baseball game Jared Stacy had two hils for Jackson.
ag:ijnsl l~e host Gallia Academy
Senior Seth Davis. JUmor Tim
Bill)! Devils r,..;ulled in an Il-l mer· Siders and sophomore Heath
cy-rule decision for the lronmen (7- Rothgeb got hits'l'or Gallipolis (O- Il
7.o\•erall &amp; 3-6 in the SEOAL).
&amp; 0-7).
~yle Stacy and Jonarhun Ervin hit
The future: This week's slate has
back -to-hack homers in the third the Blue Devils hosting Warren Local
inning to break the '\COreless dead- Monday and Ravenswood Tuesday,
loci;.
playing al Point Pleusant Wednesday.
·The Blue Devils' lone run came in' hosting Meigs Thursday and playing
the ·bonom of the fourth .
· at Logan Friday.
,Tom Cunis hit a solo homer in the )nning ll!1llb
Jackson
003-215=11-8-1
lifi~ and cracked a two -run shot in
000-100=1-3-2
tha }i., th to aid the lrnnmen\ five-nm Gallipolis
WP-Ervin
ral!)'.
·
LP - McKinniss
· !The mercy rule was enforced
when Gallipolis didn't score in bot-

..

The firs! game was a conti nUation

o a contes) in Gallipoli,, earlier this
m nth suspended after one inning
anse of inclement weather.
Jackson claimed an Il -l victory in
lhf lirsl game behind Pratt's two-hitle~ The lronladies· 10 batters in the
.econd inning genemted live runs. In
tht fifth, Gallipolis pitcher Grace
Ccichran denied Pnni the &lt;hutout'by
'i~gling. going to second base on a
p:!ised ball and sconed on a error.

'

:' In the .econd game. Gallipolis led
1-p when Jennifer Mullins singled to
ri~t . went to second on a groundout
"
scored on ;:m errol.
Jackson erased the Blue Angels'
1-1'1 lead in the first with a two-run
ra ly and newr trailed :rfter that.
: After Jackson t&lt;x;k a 6-llcad into
tht third. Gallipolis chipped away at

•

Huskey hit a grounder to second that
put the Mets ahead.
"'
·we e~pect to win-even though we
are not scoring a lot of runs." Huskey
&gt;aid. " You never want to play from
behind because that reall y m:tkes it
tough on your pitcher. He can't make
a mistake.
"i was looking for a '' ider. and
that's what I got. Fortlmately. I put
the ball in play and we got the run.
Sometimes it's not the · big hit thnt
. '
wins lor you. It's the linle things. and
I'm doing the lillie things el'en
STEALS THIRD- Marietta's Darryl Simmons (right) kicks up so11111
though my average is not what it
dual
as he steals third bass In front of River Valley third sacker C.J.
should he."
Remlinger. who be:u Jones and Johnson In the fifth Inning ol Friday's SEOAL ganie at Kyger .Creek
the Mets on April 17. allowed two Middle School. The Tigers scored five runs In the frama to earn a 21·
0 mercy-rule win. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
runs and three hits in 7 1/3 innings
and struck out eight .
New York took a 1-0 lead in the
fourth on Jim Tatum's s~crilicc ny
with the bases loaded, but Brian
McRae took a called tHird strike to
end the inning .
Cincinnati went ~head in the lifth
on Brei Boone's RBI single and a
CHESHIRE - In Friday's South- -two by Nate Stanley (2-3) and one
wild pitch by Jones with Boone on eastern Ohio Athletic League buseeach by Brian Bradbury and Zach
third.
·
ball game at Kyger Creek Middle Stanley (both went 1-1 J,. None went
''Games like this happen." Shaw
School. the Mariena Tigers scored 16 for exlra.ba,es. ·
1
said. "I didn 't make'a single mistake
runs in the first three innings en mute
The fulull!: River Valley will rlay
and I expected him !Huskey) to hit a to a 21-0 mercy-rule decision over
at Jackson Monday, at !'astern Tuesground ball. when I threw the slider. River Valley.
.
day, host Warren Local Wednesday
Instead. he hit a high chqpper and the
Leading Marieua's hit parade and play at Point Pleasant Friday.
run scored. Thai's the way this game
were Andy Swaney, who homered · lnnine l.!!JJ!ll;
is."
and doubleil. and Joel' Thrash, who Mnrictla
565-05=21-l!-0
Notes: Cincinnati placed lcft-han- had two sin~ les .
River Yalley
000-00=0-4-4
der Steve Cook~ on the 15-day dis' The Raiders 0-13 overall &amp; 1-8
WP- Strahler
abled li•t. retroactive to April 20.
in the SEOAL) were held to four hits
LP- Kern

POINT PLEASANT - Visiting
Gallia Academy High School R&lt;Jsted
a 6-1 non-league tennis victory o.ver
Point Pleasant Friday evening to
improve its season record to 3-8.
In si ngles action, _Rob Smith
defeated. Bernacki . K-2. Faris Algadah
beat Casto, 8-2, Todd Sanders beat

RIO GRANDE - Here is Jhis
triple sent April Donnally home :rnd week's schedule for events at the
Cochran's single scored Shelton.
University of Rio Gmnde's Lyne
Bu;Jackson's three-Pun lead grew Center.
to the lil'e-run ddicit that stood at the
Fitness center; gymnasium
end when :m error and Amanda Nunand racquetball couns
ley's groundonl produced two mns.
Today- 5-9 p.m. . .
Pratt slmck out.three. walked two
Monday - 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
and ga1·e up live hits to gel het'secThesday - 6 a.m.- 10 r .m.
ond win of the day. Shelton rook the
Wednesday- 6 a.m.: l()p.m.
lo" for the Blue Angels.
,
Thursday - 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
The future: This week's agenda
liriday - 6 a.m.-9 p.m.
has Gallipolis at Warren Local MonSaturday - 1-6 p.m.
day before holding a three-game
Sunday, May 3 - 5-9 p.m.
!rome \land with Point Pleasant
(Tuesday) . . Meigs (Thursday) and
Pool
Log:rn !Friday!.
·
TodAy - 6-9 p.m.
lnninK lotals·firsl llllDH:
Monday- 6-9 p.m.
Jacl;,son
250-04= 11 -9-1
1\Jesclay - 6-9 p.m.
Gallipolis
000-01=1 -3-6
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
WP - Pratt
Thursday - 6-9 p.m.
LP-Cochran
Friday ...:.. 6-9 p.m.
lmiine totals-sesond llii!Df
Saturday - 1-3 p.ni.
Gallipolis
102-00=3-5-5
. Sunday, May J - 6-9 p.m.
Jackson
242-0x=8-3-4
'
WP- Pratt
Home alhk-lic nenh
I.P - Shelton
Today - Baseball doubleheader
vs.' OSU-Newurk al noon (JV.only)

Marietta shuts out
River Valley 2·1-0

Williamson. 8-5 and Hatim Alqadah
defeated Osborne. 8-6.
In doubles play. Rob Smith-Faris
Alqadah beat Bemacki-Osbome. 8-1.
Bnell Sanders-Dave .Taylor lost to
Casto-Teabert. 3-8 and Jason ElkinsDue Punwuitkorn beat Jones-Casey,
8-6.
In exhibition outings. Brett
Sanders and Jason Elkins won.
The Blue Devils ane on the road
three times this week. Monday.
GAHS is at Ironton, Tuesday at
Logan and Wednesday at Ponsmouth
(in a makeup contest).
·
All matches stan at4:30 p.m.

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Monday"• ~m.. .

.71&lt;

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you with training, testing, and_related casts..
(A disloCated worker is generally a person who has worked at
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uhlikely· to. re1um to their previous occupation. There ..are
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Training period is approximately four weeks. training will be
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P.O. Bo:IC272
8010 North State Route 7

C"-hn, Ohio 45620:0271
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992-4484
POMEROY
1/4 Mile down river froin Pomeroy Bridge

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DETROIT TIGERS· Claimed IN I: JdT M1tnln

Mu111rc;1l ill Pit 1Shu r~ h . 7:30p.m.

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tc. St. !.A•ui!l 4

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Frid;wy's scores

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5' , 1· II. 4:05 p.m.
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14
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0-21. 7:~
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NHL first-round
'' playoff slate '

They pluy•d Sulurduy

They played Saturday

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$

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CINCifi1NAT-I (WI.':Itht:nr 1- 1) ;11 N.Y. Met_,
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Pittllbur}!h 4. S1tn Pk'l!t' 2
Milwaula.-c 7. Smt Fn1nd~u 5

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is lhe defensive line coach and also

N.Y. Mel~~ . CINCINNJ\TI 2
Atlanta6. Ariznrm -~

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at the high school level. Marino's
Vikings have been a state qualifier
four out of the last live years.
• Ray McCartney. · an assistant
coach at-Ohio University. McCanney

f1'1fi.dil ~. Ct•lormln_I
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CLEVElANll _..... : ............ 1 ~ . K .rtl''
Kans:.as City ......................... IU 12 .455
Minnc~ii ...............................K 1.\ ··'"'
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OL1roh ., . ., ........./ ...............: ...4 I~ .211

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Coordinator. McCanney has 14 years
of coaching experience with stops al
Ball State. Wittenberg. Bowling
Green.' North Carolina and OU .
McCartney has been recruiting coordinator at three different uni versities,
and he spent three years as defensive
coordinator at Wittenherg.
The cost of the camp is $10 if you
pre-regisl~r and $15 at the door. The
price includes lunch.
For more information, contact
Meigs head coac h Mike Chuncey at
42091 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy. Ohio
45769 or by calling 740-992-2158.

IV Couch of the Year. He is a six-tlme
district coach of the year. and has led
Bellaire to a 39-1 record over the l:tst
four years and three straight regional championships.
• Frank Marino. a highly succr"ful couch for 21 years at Ripley
(W.Va.) High School . Marino has

I coaching experience at Hawaii and
OU.
• Tim Hinton. the head coach a'!
Marion Harding High School. Hinton
was the 1995 Ohio Division I Coach
of the Year to go along with Central
Coach of the Year the same year. He
is a two-time Ohio Heanland Coach
of the Year. and his team has won two
titles. Hinton has 10 years of college
couching experience at Ohio State,
Ohio Universily and Wilmington
College.
• John Magistro, head coach al
Bellaire High School. Mu~islrn is !he
1995, 1996 and 1997 Ohio Di I' is ion

ccn~ ...t

Slodi-1TI1

run single in the fofth as· tfie Red Sox the Indian' got an RBI , si ngle by
went ahead 5-3. Burba allowed live pinch-hitter JeiT Branson in the ninth.
runs, four walks and four hits in 4 2Pinch-hitter Sandy Alomar then
3 innings.
·
grounded to short stop Nomar Garci ·' J mnfte terrible pilche&lt; and was aparra. who made a nifty backh~nd ­
getting behind in, the count." Burb:t ed catch and throw from almost
said. "Four walks is ridiculous. I can behind third base for the fiool out.
li ve with four walks in nine innings,
" I · th ink everybody saw a very
but not in five ·innings. That's not a special play there," Williams said.
"With the game on the line that magmajor league ritcher.
Kenny Lofton singled· 10 open nilies thai play."
Noles: In his last appearance at
Cleveland's lirst and . eu,ily stole
second on a Wakefield knu c ~ler, Jacobs Field. Wakefield pitched a sixLofton went to third on Omar hit shutout on July 18 .... Indians
Vizquel\ bunt si ngle and both scored reliever Paul Shuey had a rough outwhen Justice hit hi s fift h homer to ing for Double -A Akron in his lirst
appearance of a 30-day rehabilitation
right.
.
"I wanted 10 be aggressive there," stint for strained right groin. He faced
Justice said of -!lis lirst-pitch homer. live batters and only got one out,
.. You don '1 w;mtto ge t two ~trikes on walking one and allowing two runs
you because you don ' t know what and lhree hits in a 7-2 loss to New
Britai n.... Justice is bauing .356 ( 10kind of knuckler he' II throw ...
Jim Thome then doubled but f'or-28 ) with five doubles. three
Wakefield settled into a groove until homers and 12 RBis in his last sevJustice lined a one-out df&gt;uhle in the en games. ... Cleveland is hitting .221
140-for-1 8 I) agai.nst Boston in live
sixth.
Geronimo Berroa singled in Jus- games.
tice to pull Cleveland within 7-4. and

Scoreboard
NL'W Ytri ............................. l.'
llnslun ....... ........................... l -~
Oallin•N"C ........ ......... ............. I2
Toui.pa8ily .......................... ll
Toru{llu ~......... , .................. ... _..IJ

15 To Choose From!

j1995 GMC SLE

ROCK SPR !NOS ...:. The lirs't
M,eigs .Football Coaches Clinic will
'be held on Saturday, May 9 from 9
a.m. until 3 p.m. -.u .Meigs High
School.
The clinic wjll feature three iop
high school and two college coaches.
Among those scheduled to att~nd
are:
• Jeff Mullen, an Ohio University
assist~nt. Mullen coaches the tight
ends and offensive tackles for the
Bobcats. Mullen was an 1989 allAmerican defensive back at Wittenberg and has seven years of Division

r
Tc~ ~ •.:!.~-- . -~~ -~r~,·-

1m PIIIIICS11•111 Elljr

Bragg hit a two-run 'llomer in the
sixth inning. giving him seven hits in
his las! II at-bats (.636). against .
Cleveland pitchers. He had his lirst
career four-hit game (4-for-4) against
the Indians on April 19.
"Tonight I helped, but different
guys ha1•e come through for us all
season," Bragg said. ''If we keep getting good pitching and defense I
don 't see why we can't just keep on
winning." .
.
Wakefield allowed four runs and
seven hits in six innings. Derek
Lowe pitched two hitless innings and
Tom Gordon worked the ninth for his
sixth save .
"Tim's knuckler got better its he
went on but we went to the bullpen
because they ha've done such a good ·
job." Red Sox manager limy
Williams said. "Uerek came in and
had a good sinker and threw a lot of
strikes. Tom ga•e up a run but closed
it OUI.,.
i
Cleveland staner Dave Burba (23) allowed Reggie Jefferson' s RBI
groundout und John Valentin's two-

·Meigs Football Coaches Clinic scheduled for May 9

,

$
1992 FORD ILT

.

'

IwD

'

Notes '
football golf
• A Lyne Center membership is
required
to use the facilities . Facultpurney scheduled for Saturday
ty. staff. students and administration
: POMEROY - The fifth anmml member under I0.
will be admilled with their 1D cards.
Meigs football golf tournament will
The cost of the tournament will be
• Racquetball coun reservations
tX, held on Saturday :tl the Meigs S45 and cost includes can.lunc_h and can be made one day in advance by
County Golf Course.
bevemges. For 11101e information, call ·&lt;;alling 245-7495 or 1-800-282-710 I.
' The tournament will be a bring Marauder football coach Mil(e
• All guests must be accompanied
ybur own team. four-player ser.imhle. Chancey at992-2158 (work) or 304- by a Lyne Center m~mbership holdthe ream must have :r team handicar 773-6453 (home)
er (S! fee).
of al least 40 wi.th only one . team

CLEVELAND (API - The
Boston Red Sox sure have this comeback thing figured out.
The Red Sox spotted Cleveland a
three-run lead but rallied behind
Darren Bragg and Tim Wakefield for
their lOth romeback win. 7-5 over
the Indians Friday night.
"You never want to be down 3-0
at any time to any team but I would
r.lther it be in the lirst inning than the
ninth," ~did Wakefield 11 -1), who ·
nerired 16 straight after yielding three
runs and four hits to the firsi four batters he faced. "I've got a good team
be~ind me and they bailed me out."
Boston. oiT to its best stan through
21 games since 1946. has won live
straight and 12 of 13.
Does 1946 ring a bell to Re!l Sox
fans• Boston started the '46 season
18-3 and rlayed in the World Series
that year.
·
"If you ' re worried about being
down 3-0 in the' lirst inning you are
not going. to win many games."
Bragg~aid . " We're all men here, We
know what it takes to get ·it done."

AL standings .

-·-

-·-

Red Sox rally to defeat Indians 7-5

n ....

I

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiiJpolls, OH •.Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday,-Aprll26, 1998

•·

-·-

·~tifthitaw~e~~~l sM;Igs

··

GAHS tennis team defeats
PPHS for 3rd win of season

Jackson
defeats
'
Gallipolis in twinbill . lyne Center slate
'
:JACKSON
- Senior pitcher
An1ber Pr~tt won twice Friday to lead
the' Jackson softball team to a doublf~cader sweep of the Galli a Acade y Blue Angels.

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Sunday; Aprll26, 1998

Sunday,April26,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Po.lnt Pleasant, WV

Gift triggers memories
of Clemente's heyday

-Yankees return
to repaired stadium,
defeat Tige~s 8-4
By BEN WALKER
NEW YORK !APl - Tlie only
incident at Yankee Stadium occurred
on the field. no1 in the stands.
Closed for I I days af1er a 500pound expansion joint crashed down
from the upper deck. the ballpark reopened Friday night -with the New
York Yankees beating the Detroit
Tigers 8-4.
Owner George Steinbrenner
watched the first five innings in the
same sec!ion where the chunk or steel
and concrele fell. though he did not
sn in the exact sem thai

Wll"

crus'1ed.

He was surrou nded by a half dozen
fans wearing hard hat s. and even
bought
hot dogs for everyone rn Loge
HERO'S WELCOME- Meigs Marauders Tony Dugan (1 0) and Kyle
Box
22.
Smlddle (7) congratulate teammate Aaron Vanlnwagen after Vanln"It was great:· Steinbrenner said.
wagen's game-winning hit In the eighth Inning of Friday's Ohio Divi"
It
was lrke old times when you're a
sion game against B.elpre. The hit gave the Marauders a 4·3 victory.
k1d. gomg with a hunc h of guys."
(Timaa-Sentlnel photo by Dave Harris)
Darryl Strawberry·, homer mto
the
upper deck highlighted a four-run
Vanlnwagen delivers game-winning hit
frrst rnnmg. and the Yankees were
well on the way to !heir l~th "in in
I} games when the benches and
bull pens cleared in the eigh'th.

.Meigs tops Belpre
:4-3 in eight innings
:·
·
:

'

'
'
:
:
·&gt;

• · By TIM DAHLBERG
LAS VEGAS IAPl- It may he
Jim Colbcn's course. but i!'s Hale
. ~ Irwin's tour.
ColtJCn. ;II home on " hometown
course. shot a 7-under-par 65 Friday
in the Las Vegas Senior Classic 10
'move into contention for his Jirs1 vic·

tory since prostate canrer forced
him to take an extende&lt;l hreak from
competitive golf. ,
But it was Irwin. lhc dominanl
plaxer for the last year and a half on
the senior tour. who had a one-stroke
lead midway lhrough the 71-hole
event.
Irwin. winner of last week 's PGA
Seniors' Championshrp and the
defending Las Vegas chilmpion.
played nawlessly before bogeying
the final hole to cap a 5-under 67 that
put him at 7 under. A stroke behind
' was Colbcn and senior rookie Bua
Thomas.
· "I like the way things are going,"
Irwin said. "It's a tlice cnrryover
from last week ...
Irwin. who starred lhe day 2
·1 under. didn't make a IJiiStilke until the·
final hole. when he left a shot in a
11reenside bunker and made only his
: !!«f?Rd·bogey of the-toumamenl . He
&gt;

}

have the worst record in the maJors
al4-15.
·
"I think they're frustrated. "
S1rawberry said. ·'Tirey're a prclly
good team and lhey're not playing
well. But we're not nul !here to he
fighting ...
This three-game senes was nng• nally supposed 10 be at Tiger Studi um. But because of a nip-flop caused
by the problem at Yankee Stadium ,
the teums played at Detrnil lasl
weekend and swilched 10 New York ·
!his weekeno: The Yankees also
moved one game against Anah&lt;•im to
Shea Siadium and postponed Jwo
othe~s . .
LETTING IT FL\' - Meigs pitcher Tangy Laudermilt leta a pitch fly
Many ·fans and several curious during Friday's TVC home game against division rival Belpre, In which
Tigers poinled at and examined the the Marauders outlasted their guesls 7·4. (Times-Sentinel photo by
repair work done since the beam tum- Dave Harris)
·
·
bled. The only person in danger.
however, was Detroit staner Greg
Keagle .
The Yankees got 'six hils in the
first inning. with Strawberry's tworun drive to righl field making il 4-

Meigs softball crew
outlasts Belpre 7-4 ·. ..

0.

Strawberry homered last week in
lions rn the ailercation. touched off the Yankees.' relocated game to Shea,
~o~· hen Yankees catcher Joe Girardi
bul was just 1-for-14 on a road trip
By DAVE HARRIS
wr th the tyrng ru11 and force the ga me exc hanged words with Delroit catch- that followed.
T-S Correspondent
mto extra innmgs.
·
er Rau l Casanova. who had just
"For me. I've always liked playROCK SPRINGS -Aaron VanIn the boll om of the eighth inning scored on a t)ol'o-run double by 'Bo!&gt;" ing here." Strawberry said. " I like
lnwagen's one-out shot over the bag Ram,hur~ struck OUI. but the ball got by Higginson.
playing in New York. period. I'm
at first scored Ryan Ramsburg with pu&gt;t 1hc cmc her and rolled to the
"He said somelhing to me and I preuy excited-about being buck."
the winning run. as Meig;,; defe:ued back . . wp aJiowlng Ram,hurg to reach said somelhing back." Girardi said.·
Strawberry hit his fifth homer. and
Belpre 3-2 in eight innrngs in TVC first. Ram,hu rg aJv;rnced to 'ccond
Moments earlier. Tigers manager Scou Brosius had lhree hits and drove
baseball action Friday evening at base on a wilu pitch setting the stage Buddy' Bell argued with plate umpire in two runs.
Meigs High School.
fnr Vanlnwagen'&lt; heroics.
Jrm Evans. claiming New York
Keagle (0-4) ga••e up I0 hits
It was revenge in a bi ~ way for
Aaron in hi' only plate appearance reliever Mike Stanton had hit Joe before gelling lhe final out in 1he
Meigs. as the Marauders dropped a of the game. lmed a one-two pitch Randa with" pitch in apparent retal- third. falling behind 5-0.
21-0 decision to the Golden Eagles over 1he lirst b'"e hag and rntothe iation for Doug Bochtler plunking
"I just couldn't make a pitch."
on April I in lhe season's second corner. allowin~ Ram~hurg tn JOg Tino Muninez.
Keagle said. "I just hung a changegame.
l
hom~ wilh the\\ 1nnmg run.
"Why Maninez thinks we hit up to Strawberry."
, Belpre took a 2-0 kild in the third
Bentley wenlthe route to pick up him is idiolrc." Bell ~a rd. "I think
David Cone (2-1) did not allow a
inn mg. Brad West walked. ;rnd Kyle !he"' in. the junror pitched a four hit· Tino Manrnez rs 100 good a player to hit until the founh . He gave up three
Hamilton was ~il _by J pilch. Bolh · ter. struck ou1 13. w;rlked eiglu ;rnd lhink we're lhrowing at him. Whal hits in 6 I 13 innings and raised his
runners moved up on sloien bases hi! two ha\lcf' . Jeremiah al"rleclthe drd Joe Randa have to do wllh.this'" liFetime record agnrnstthe Tigers to
and then scored on a hase hit otf the M:rrmrde" a\ the plate wrlh a pair of
" If !here's a reason to do it. fine. I I- I, including a victory last Saturbal of Zack Keilh.
srngJe,. Mallrn. V.rnlnwagen and I undersland~
· " he said . " But this' day against Keagle.
But Meigs came hack in the bol- Davenpon each added singles.
For what" ..
Mariano Rivera. in his first game
tom or the inning IO I he g;rme al 2Steve McGuire was the lo~ing
Yunkees mar · ger Joe Torre said since injuring his right groin on
ali Brad Davenpon and Kyle Smid- pitcher. in relref of Josh Slrolhers. all the luss was for nolhing.
April 5. pitched the ninth for New
die both walked. Pat Manin and Jere- The two gave up six hils and walked .
"They hit Ti no and we hil Ran- York. Before the game. he had a-pliJSmiah Bentley followed with hack-to- five Bradford had a douhlc to lead da:· he said. " I don'! know what trc. toy hard hat in his locker. lhe
back singles to make 1t a 2-1 game. Belpre Kerth. McGuire and Slrothers Buddy wus so upset aboul. ..
same kind that was passed around I he
Smiddie then came into score on a adueu single' for the Golden Eagles.
A crowd of 26. I 73 that included Yankees Front office as a joke earli·
sacrifice ily off the bal of Tony
Meigs (9-5 overilll ;rnd fl-5 in the several other hard hats aud Mayor er in lhe week.
Dugan.
TVCi. which hosJed South Webster Rudolph Giuliimi - lie was in a
Noles: The Tigers claimed infieldBelpre broke the tie in the frflh in a double header on Smurday. will front-row seat next to the Yankees er Jeff Manto on waivers from Cleveinning. 'Steve McGuire singled and traveltll Vinlon Counly lln Monday. dugout - ~aw New York win its land and designated pitcher Scon
Kyle Bradford followed wilh a &lt;lou· Inning l!!lllh
·
founh in a row and improve the AL's · Sanders (0-2. }7 .69 ERA) For assignble to deep lel't field. McGuire then Bclp1e
002-0 IO- !XI=30~03 best record at 13-5.
ment .... The Yankees matched their
scored the I!" ahead run on a hang- Mergs
002-000-11=4-6-0
Detroit has loslth_ree straight and best start in 10 years.
bang play at the plate on a passed h;rll
Belpre: Josh St rothers. Steve
to give Belpre the leild. ·
__ McGuire (hi and Slew Spnggs
Kyle Smiddie led off !he sevenlh
Meigs· Jeremiah Belli ley and J. T.
C 0 M P L E r ·E S
inning with a walk and then moved Humphreys
JUNIOR SEASON to s~cond on a passed ball. Dugan
WP-Bcntley
then qme up with a brg two out sinLI'-McGurre
Robert Morris volleygle into nght Jicld to o;core Smiddie
ball player Misty Cole-

Irwin takes one-stroke lead
in Las Vegas Senior Classic
made '" brrdres. including three in
a row on hi&lt; back side.
The play was typical of !he kind
of year Irwin j.., huving. coming off n
sc;1son that ..;aw h1m wm mne times

and make more than $2 million on
lhc ~cninr circuit.

So far this year. Irwin has won
twn of lhc ~ix tournamenh he has
played. ilnd hasn'l 'rrnlshed worse
than Jifth.

By SAM WILSON
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
April is a.month of celebration in our family. It
see'!'s that every other ·day brings a birthday or
anmversary to celebrate, and that doesn 'I include
the Easter holiday. It's the rile of spring, and it can
get expensive.
.
I am always perplexed abo111 what to get my
o~phew for his · birthday. He likes anything I get l.:a.lii:l:::l
frt!", b~t I always want to make his day special. You know, get hipt som~
t~mg hts parents won't. Like the time I went to Nashville, Ind., and bought
htm a rubber band gun so he could shoot my sister.
. Andrew liked it, but my sister wasn't too thriJied abput dodging prqjecules for thre~ months. It took her that long to realize the gun wouldn 'I wo~k
without rubber bands.
That was ages ago, but it still brings a smile to my face. This year, I
ordered him a special baseball jersey from the Cooperstown Collection. Personally, !like the old Negro League unifonns, but I decided to stick with the
major leagues for Andrew.
. ·
It was a difflcuil choice, beCause I had to decide among numerous players and teall)S. I finally settled on tbe Pittsburgh Pirates' No. 21, Roberto
Clemente.
I saw Clemente play quite a few times in Wrigley F:ield. Every time he
~pproached the plate, he moved his head like he had spent the night sleep. mg on the wrong side ofthe bed. He hit,}an and played right field like no
. other player I had ever seen. He had an ann withbut peer.
·.
One of my earliest memories of Clemente was watching NBC's game of
the week. It was 1966 and Dodger great Sandy Koufax was working on a
shutout in the ninth inning at Forbes Field. The Dodgers w·ere always on the
·game of the week because tHey were world champions, and there was no one
beller than Koufax. Regretfully, it was to be his last season.
The game's final score was 4: 1. Clemente hit a towering home run to ruin
Koufax's bid for a shutout.
Like Koufax, Clemente's career was cut shon. Not by injury, but by
death. He died in 1972 tryi~g to he.lp the victims of an eanhquake in Managua, Nicaragua.
Andrew ealled to thank me for his binhday present. To my surprise, however, he had never heard of Clemente until he received my present. Imagine
that! I was' shocked! I guess I'm older than I realize!
. I still remember Clemenle's great performance in the 1971 World Series
.against the Orioles. Along with Willie Stargell, Steve Blass and a young
Bruce Kison, the Pirates overcame a 3-1 deficit 10 win the series in seven
ganfes. Clemente, however, was the real star.
The jersey became a learning experience for iny nephew. Upon receiving
it, he looked up Clemente in the local library and read all about his career
and life.
During our conversation, he told me how tragic it was that CieiJiente died
so young. He told me how the en.cyclopedia described him as a great human-.
&lt; itarian. He also told me-how lucky I was to see Clemente play.
: • My nephew was righl. All of us who saw him play were lucky. It was only
.: :then that I realized how fonunate I had been.
• • The most imponant pan of my nephew's present was the gift I received.
•:We all giye gifts to please our loved ones, but it never crossed my mind that
! •Andrew's gift )V3S more for me than for him.
, ' lb tell you the truth, I'm looking forward to organizing my Christmas
•1 list. I wonder what gifts that will bring.
•
Sam WIIIOfl, Ph.D. II .n IIIOCIIIe proleuor of hlllory lithe Unlverlily of
Rio Grenell. An avid fin ol elltpOrtl - end • neilr minlacelfollower of basket·
l bill- he 11-1 neUve of Gery, h!d., end agl'lduete of Indiana Unlverelty- which
i : •hould tell 1Hdltf'll'1011111hlng ebout Where hll head (and Hoosier hHrt) Ia.

nine m a row on the road . The Tiger~

There were no punches nor ejec-

man (Gallia Academy.
'95) completed her
junior season last fall
·with the Colonials.
The six-foot middle
hitter appeared in 31
matches, recording 21
kills and 10 errors for
a .129 hitting percentage.

Pomeroy • Mlddleeort • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

By DAVE HARRIS
. a single. Stepftanie Wigal dnuhled
T-S Correspondent
and Abby Harris reached on a Belpre
. ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs error. Shannon Price drove in the
JUmped ou1 10 " o- I lead ;Jfter lhrce inning's linal run wrlh a sacrifice lly.
innings and went on to post a 7-4 win
Belpre scored a run in the lhinl
over Belpre in Tri- Viilky ConFerence inning nn a s1ngle to Ad~lm, s a s1olcn
Ohio Division "'flbali aclion Friday hase ilmi il biise hit niT the biit of
at Meigs Hrgh School.
Foraker.
'
. Meig s took a 4-0 leau in the secMeigs ad~ed Jwo more runs in the
ond inning . Tomgy Laudcnnilt boltnm nf the third innmg ln increase
reached on an error. lo leau on the the lead to 6- I. Two willks." II elders
inn1ng. Amher Vinin~ followed w1th
(See MARAUDERS' on B-5)

nal

•

1 O~io

~ays

-~

, Ohio Division of wadlife issued
: •14.000 outstnnding catch nwnrds to
• :anglers participating in its 1997 Fish
· ·Ohio program.
,
: · There were 235 ' Mas\cr Angler
awards given to anglers who caught
four or more different species of
nward-qualifying fish during the year.
In 1996. the division issued
14,1(10 Fish Ohio and 214 Master
Angler awards.
Among !he 17 species of fish eli' gible for recognition in the Fish Ohio
program. 5.820 awards. or 42 percent. were given for omstanding
catches of walleyes 1hat measured at
least 28 inches. Sunfish 11.600).
crappie ( 1.4901. largemouth bass
(6ROl and yellow perch .(680) were
umong the other lop species cate: gories For which Fish Ohio awards
~ .iwere issued last year.
•• :;; There were 68 uwurds given for
-: :outstanding cmches of nonhem pike.
; ra category that was added last year
• for Fish Ohio recognition.'The new; ·ly combined rainbow trout/steel head
: 4rout category produced 350 angler
t "awards.
: " In additi'!n to ccnilic;ues. anglers
l •receive a Fish Ohio hat pin in recog' :nition for their first qualiFying cmch
1 ·or the year. Seventeen species of
1ame lish ;rre eiigihle for Fish Ohio

Don't

Be 'A
•

Part

1991 IIISIII

Ill .

Miss Out

4 o,., air PW. PL. AMffM cassette
OnTht
Of
··························· ~
- ...- ..s••·••s sawnss
It! ,,,., ,~c•._..................
Price Mutt End
MSAP 119801700

.....

..

Mystery surr-o unds
creatine as FDA·
issues warning

By GARY STRAUSS
and GARY MIHOCES
USA TODAY
Hyped by professional alhletes
and heavily trumpeted in glossy
health and fitness publications. creatine's markeling hoopla and word of
mouth among jocks has made it one
oF the fastest-growing spons n~tri­
tional supplements of the 1990s.
But creatine's s!a\Us as the new
muscle candy could soon change.
With use becoming widespread
among hi gh school and college ath·
letes. the Food and Drug Administration issued a warning last we~k
!hat anyone planning to use creatine
should first consult a physician or
health care proFessional. The FDA
disclosed to USA TODAY thai it is
exploring whether creatine is ·linked
to grand mal seizures in two users
and a tumor in another.
The FDA and the National Collegiate Athletic Association also are
investigating whether creatine played
a role in the deaths of three coilejje
wrestlers. although NCAA investigators note that creatine may nol have
been a factor because all three were
also on intense training or ·weight·
reducing regimes. And despite widespreitd use among professional alhietes.- the Association of Professional Team Physicians said !hat 85 percent of its members won't recommend cremine until more studie~ are
done on its effects.
Crealine supplements. initially
marketed to weight lifters and hodybuilders. have been around For nearly two decades.
Considered a silfer. legal altern&lt;~·
tive to steroids. creatine is taken by
athletes in a variety of spons as a per·
formance-enhancing supplement on
the belief that it builds muscle mass.
strength and enduranco. A month's
supply typrcally costs $15 to $50.
Creatine is a staple among m&lt;~ny
pro sports teams. such as the San
Francisco 49ers. which Spm·r.• 11111.1rrmed just reponed has "tubs" of it
around. Its proponents include
endorsers- such as Den.ver Broncos
'quanerback John Elway and' Baltimore Orioles oullielder Brady Anderson.
It has become so popular 'that it's
recognition. Award applications are now a $100 million business.
available at many fishing license our- accounting for about 10 percent or
lets and- from the Division of the $1 billion sports nutritional business. said Scoll Dempsler of indusWildlife.
. try tracker Packaged Facts. Among
creatine's leading marketers: Weider.

Nutrition and General Nutrition.
which operate more than 3.000 GNC
retail ·outle!s.
"Here's a protein that can help
improve ability to work at a higher
intensity and perform more intensely at spons." said ONC spokesman
John Troup. "We've studied it for
some time. We've been unable to find
any study that can demonstrate a ~eri­
ous problem or a high level of concern.··

Muscle Trihe. a Salt Lake Citybased direct mail marketer. said a hot
market among users are elderly consu mers who have heard it can stem
muscle atrophy.
"Righi now. we're probably selling $80.000 of products a month, and
about half ts creatine," said
spokesman Jeff Dunyon. " Month in
and month out, if's our best-selli'ng
product.
Creatine's image wus burnished
when several Denver Broncos
appeared on national TV following
the Super Bowl, wearing baseball
caps -with t11e EAS logo of Golden.
Colorado-based nutritional supplement marketer Experimenlai and
Applied Sciences.
"A'ccording to all the research
I've read and the people I've talked
to. iJ seems to be a fairly benign supplement . in the sense of hnrmful
effects." said Broncos trainer Sieve
Antonopulos. "The only negative
thing, and it really hasn't been
shown, at least from what I can see.
is the long-term effects. what it's
going to do down the line. ·But at this
point, the researchers don't think
that's a concern."
While several Broncos use creatine. Antonopulos said lhe FDA
warning is appropriate. "That' probably makes a lot of sense. e.~peciillly
young athletes. On any type of supplementation, that would be appropriate."
Overall. the spons community'S
acceptance of crealine is mi~ed. Said
BiJJ Bryan, senior team physician for
baseball's Houston Astros: "Creatine
improves your ability to work out.
(But) it does cause you to retilin fluid, and most of the weight gain you
experience is from the water you

DOW gives 14,000
:outstanding catch awards
'
! . COLUMBUS. Ohio [(\P)- The

of
·-spring
Clearance·
. ............ $15,389

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1111 U . . . Csssww slsa • -

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Taylor Team of Dealerships • SI Years of Sale1 Experrence Jo As1i11 Your Need 1

96 FORO TAURUS GL 17277, 19,000 miles,
balance ol fad. warranty ...........................:...................... $13,415

.

.::

bedllner, ,... slleltr................................................. ,,...........$8995

I

96 FORD RANGER 17t40, 31,000 mil11, bal. ol fact. warr.;
AJC, rear allcllr, aport whHia .................:.......... ~ ................ $9882
96 FORD RANGER 4X4 LONG BED 17190, V-6 etig., A/C, sport
wlllells, XLT, 22,000 milts, bal. of filet. warr................... $13,962
96 CHEV.5-10 17264, Whitt, extra cab, V-6 eng., Tahoe Pkg.,
casllltt, A/C, lopper, aport wheels ................................... $8495
96 FORD RANGER $UPER CAB XLT 17232, V-6 eng., A/C,
caaselte, sport wheels, rear flip sells ............................ $t2,995
96 CHEY. $-10 17254, Extra Ctb, 3rd door, red, LS. Pkg., V-6
eng., A/C, ca.-e. bed liner, sport wheels ................... $12,995
96 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB 17230, XLT, purple, A!C,
cruise, tilt, PW, PL. rear slider, sport whaels,
rear ftip 18ltl.... :..............................,................ :................$t1,995
95 CHEV. 5-tO.EXTRA CAB 17233, LS. Pkg., blue, AfT, Clll.,
btdlintr, sport whetls ...................................................... $10,995
BB PORD F·1504X4 XLT 117241, Black, AIT, A/C, tilt, cruise, V-8
eng., 8' btd, AMJFM call., dual gutanks, tport wheels, bal.
ol filet. werrtnty ................................................................ $15,1J91i

lUI

•

This offer··expires June ·30, .1998.

97 DODGE CARAVAN GRAN VAN S.E. 117271, 11,000 mi., bal.
o1 flct. werr., ltlltlldlng door, AfT, A/C, tin, crulst, PW, PL. ·
luggage riCk ........................................................,.. ,,.........$19,900
97 DODGE CARAVAN GRAN VAN S.E., AfT, A!C, tilt, cruise,
PW, PL. rear A/C, left alldlng door, roof rldl, 28,000 miles,
1111. of II1Ct. warr.......................................~ ....................... $11,900
88 CHEV. LUMINA APV 17243, Green, AfT, A/C, db, cruise,
~.... P'W, PL. ....................................................................$13,343
H FORO WINOSTAR GL f!'24t, 17,000 mlltl, bal•• filet.
warr., l'ld, Nr. NT, dlt, crtult, PW, PL ........................... $t6,750
110 PONTIAC TRANSPORT 17228, VI tog., A{T, A/C, tilt,
Ctulll, PW, PL ...........,.......- ................................ - ...........SitiS
96 FORD WINDSTAR GL 17203, V-8 eng., 7 pill., Nr, A!C, dlt,
cruiN, PW, PL....................................................-............. $15,315
112 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER 17212, blue, A/fT. AIC, tilt, crullt, 7
p II II,................................................................................. $4515

.

W&amp;l IIWII W*''l

88 CHEV. BLAZER 4X417131, Rtd,,LS. Pl!g., A{T, A/C, tilt, .
CruiM, PW,
roof liCit IJIOI1 whnla ...........................$tl,tl5

• GEO

•

OLDSMOBILE

1616 Eastern Ave.
~aUipolis,
0

Balteries

.,·: Belpre: Adams (LP) and Mollo•ban
-: • Meigs: Laudennilt (WP) and Vln- .

ftiCII

91 MAZDA 28011 TRUCK 17261, Blue, sport wheels,
tonnHU cover ....................................................................,.$5495
93 NISSAN KING CAB 117092, Rear ftlp 11111, AM/FM, rear
slider, A/C, badllner, tpOrt wheel• ..................................... $6995
95 FORD RANGER 17228, Auto. lrans, AM/FM cassette,
badilner................................................................................$5995
93 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB 17225; V-6 eng., A!C, rear lllp
seat, XLT, tilt, cruise, sport WhHII .................................... $7995
95 CHEV. 9-1017154, Red, AM/FM, aport wheels .............$7995
95 NISSAN TRUCK 17t22, Purple, A!C, casette, btdilntr,
rear slider ............................................................................. $8900
95 NISSAN K/C 4X4 17005, AfT, A!C, V-6 eng., rear nip sells,
bed liner, rear slider, tilt, cruise, sport wl'leels ................ $13,995
93 TOYOTA T-100 4X4 17098, Red, B' btd, A/C, caalllte,

(Continued from 8-4)

I

•WilE~

• """"Stoedng

crullll, PW, PL............................................. $t,3,645
17207, Graen, V-8 eng., AfT, A/C, tilt, cruise,
PW, PL. P. 11at, sport wheelt ...........................................$1 t ,800
95 PONTIAC GRANO AM 17265, AfT, A/C, til~ cruise, PW, PL.
V-6 eng..................................................................................$8495
94 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 17200, Lellher power seat, AfT,
A/C, tilt, cruise, PW, PL. sport wl'leele ............................ $10,600
92 DODGE DYNASTY LE 17234, Vi eng., AfT. A/C, tilt, cruise,
PW, PL........................................... :.......................................$5495
93 DODGE INTREPID ES 1'7148, Blue, AfT,'A/C, tin, cruise,
PW, PL. P. seats, aport whaels ........................................... $9995
94 MERCURY SABLE 17257, V-6 eng., AfT, A!C, t!R, cruise,
ca"ene ................, ..........................:.................................... $8495
92 CHEV. LUMINA 17260, V-6 eng., A/T, A/C, 1111, cruise,
Air. " "'

95

'i17 CHEV. MALIBU LS. 17m, "Loaded", 28,000 miles, bal. of
IKI. warranty .................................................................... $14,900

' 'choice and " single by Vining plated

5.9°/o APR Up Dl 72 Months!··

I:~:~~apo~~rt:;~e~oii'i&lt;E'ii'ii1ii1:·wh~~:·i~~h;;·p_..!~!f."

Clastnt ................................................................................ $5995

1.farauders...

1 Jhe Marauder runs.
:: : · Meigs added another run in the
~· "ixth inning on u base hit by Wigal
~nd a Belpre error to gi\'~ !he
, !;!amuders a 7-1 leild headmg into the
' fimli inning.
:• .• Belpre plated three.runs on singles
1 by Adams, Mays. Lawson and a
: !;!eigs error· to pull to within three.
: .But Belpre could not get any closer.
1 •
Laudennilt was the winning pitch: er giving up nine hils. walking three
I jmd striking &lt;lilt eight. Meigs only
t had four hits led by Wigal with a dou: Lie and a single. Vining added two
I $ingles. . •
·
I .Adams was the lasing pitcher
J. ~iving up.four hits. five w;~lks. while
j! Striking OUI fi••e. l\llays had a duuhie
. 1 bnd a single to leilll Belpre. Adl,llllS
added a pair of singles. · '
The Marauders' Tonya Miller
1inj)lred h~r ankle in the firth inning
1 and missed the rest of the contest.
: The extent of the injury is not known
' at this time.
;
Meigs will play at Vinton County
' on Monday.
·
: lgninlll!lllb
•
: peipre
001-000-3=4-9-3
·: Meigs
042-001-x-7-4-2

power windows I locka ..................................................... $9948
95 FORO TAURUS GL 17248, Green, AfT. A/C, tilt, cruise,
power wlndowa .................................................................... $9895
115 CHEV. CAMARO ffl15, Graen, T·topt, tilt, cruise, A/C,

use. however. "Some·of the guys like
it because it gives them a boost when
they go back to the weight room ....
That's both physically and psychologically heneficial:' Bryan said.

I"

~

windows I locka .................................................................... $5495

97 DODGE INTREPID 17269, A/C; AfT. tilt, cruise, power ·
windows, locks, caslllte ................................................. $12,995
'i17 PONTIAC BONNEVIUE 17245, Graen, AfT, A/C, AM/FM,
tilt, cruise, power-windows &amp;locka ................................ $13,243
96 OLDS CIERA 17219, AfT, A/C, tilt, cruise, power windows &amp;
locks........................................................................ :.............$9140
96 CHEV. CORSICA 117158, V-6 eng., AfT, A/C, tilt, power
windows &amp; IOckl..................................................................$8995
95 BUICK CENTURY 17t55, V-6 eng., AIT, A/C, tilt, cruise,

retain. not muscle mass."
There's no club policy bilnning its

j

I

PRICE
95 FORO T-BIRO 17272, 30,000 mllta, bal. of tact. warranty,
AfT, A/C, lilt, cru.lae, PW, PL, P. seat, aport wheela ........ $11,895
97 FORO TAURUS GL lmD, 21,000 miles, bal. of feet. werr.,
tilt, crulae, PW, P. seat .......................................$13,995
TAURUS GL 17255, 30,000 miles, bal. of tact.
werranty, tilt, crulae, apon wheels, AIT, A/C, P. equip... $12,995
H CHEV. CAVALIER 17104, 34,000 mlle1, bal. of tact. warr.,
red, AfT, AJC, AM/FM, rear defroster .:.................................$9995
96 CHEV. CAVALIER 17197, 35,000 miles, bal. of fact. werr.,
/JilT, A/C, AM/FM CD, 1P9rl wheels .................................. $10,300
97 PONTIAC GRANO PRIX SE (wide track) 17244, 21,000
miles, bal. of f1ct. warr., AfT, A/C, tilt, cruise, PW, PL.. ..$17,660
96 CHEV. MONTE CARLO 17216, 34,000 miles, bal. ol fact. . .
warr., A/T, A/C, tilt, cruise, PW .................................:....... $12,935
97 GEO METRO 17t49, Red, 20,000 m1111, bll. of fact. warr.,
AfT, A/C ................................................................................. $7995
95 FORO CONTOUR 17171, 33,000 miles, bal. of fact. warr.,
A/C, caae., rear defroster ............................. :...................... $8995
95 HONDA CIVIC OX 17188, 28,000 miles, bal. of fact. warr.,
AfT, crulae, power wtndowa &amp;locks ............................... $t0,895
·96 DODGE AVENGER 17263, 33,000 miles, bal. of tact. warr.,
tilt, cruise, AMJFM CO, power windows· .........................$13,995
95 NISSAN ALTIMA 17173, Green, bill. of tact. warr., AfT, A!C,
tilt, crUise, PW, PL...:.......................................................,$1 0,995
95 DODGE INTREPID 17273, V-6 eng., AfT, A/C, tin, cruise,
PW, PL...................................................................................$9495
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Sunday, April26, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, C?H • PQint Pleasant, WV

By SAM WILSON
nme ...Sentlnel Correepondent

By BEN WALKER
.
nine in a row on the road. The Tigers
NEW YORK lAP) - The only have the worSt record in the mujnrs
'
incide nt at Yankee Stadium occurred at4-15.
on the field. not in the stand,.
"I think they're lhstruted,"
Closed for II days after a 500- Strawberry said. ·~They're a pretty
pound expansion joint crashed down good team and they're not playing
from the upper deck. the ballpark re- well. But we're not out there to be
opened Friday night with the New fighting ."
York Yankees beating the Detroit
This three-game serie..; was origi Tigers 8-4.
nally supposed to be at Tiger St&lt;~di ­
Owner George Steinbrenner uni. But because of a flip-flop caused
watched the' first five innings in the by the problem at Yankee Staditnn,
same 'ectinn where the chunk of "eel the teams played at Detroit last
and concrete fell. though he did not weekend and switched to New York
sit in the ex.,cl seatlhat was crus'1ed. this weekend. The Yankees also
He was surrounded by a half dozen moved one game against Arwhl'im to
•
fans wearing hard hats. and even Shea Stadium and postponed two
LETTING IT FL\' - Meigs pitcher Tangy Laudermilt leta a pitch fly
HERO'S WELCOME- Meigs Marauders Tony Dugan (10) and Kyle bought hot dogs for everyone in Loge others.
· Many fans and several curious during Friday's TVC home game against division rival Belpre, In which
Smlddle (7) congratulate teammate Aaron Vanlnwagen after Vanln· Box 22.
.. II was· great," Steinbrenner said. Tigers pointed at and examined the the Marauders outlasted their guests 7-4. (Times-Sent)nel photo by
wagen's game-winning hit In the eighth Inning of Friday's Ohio Dlvl·
alon game against Belpre. The hit gave the Marauders a 4·3 victory. "II was like old times when you're a repair work _done ~ ince the !learn tum - Dave Harris)
bled. The only person in thmger.
(Times·Senlinel photo by Dave Harris)
• ' kid. going with a hunch of guys."
Darryl Strawberry\ homer into however, was Detroit starter Greg
the upper deck highlighted a four-run Keagle.
·
Vanlnwagen delivers game-winning hit
first inning. and the Yankees were
The Yankees got 'six hits in the
well on the way to therr I:!th win in first inning. with Strawherry's two13 game' when the benches and rim drive to right field making it 4bull pens clc:tre&lt;l in the eighth.
0.
Ther~ were no punches nor ejecStrawberry homered last week in
. a sin!!'te. Step6:mie ·Wigal doubled
tions in the altercation. touched off the Yankees' relocated g:tme to Shea. By DAVE HARRIS
1
and Abby Harris reached 'on a Belpre
I
when Yankees catcher Joe Girardi but was just 1-for-14 on a road .trip T-S Correspondent
ROCK
SPRINGS
Meigs
error.
Shannon Price drove in the
, By DAVE HARR!S
with the tying run and force the game exchanged -'•ords with Detroit catch- that followed.
,
jumped
out
to
a
h-1
lead
after
three
inning's
final run with 01 sa,rifice lly.
into extra inn ings.
·
er Raul Casanova . . who had just
;. T-S Correspondent
"For me. I've always liked playinnings
and
went
on
to
post
a
7-4
wi
n
Belpre
scored a run in the third
•
ROCK SPRINGS - Aaron Van . In the botlom of the eighth inning · scored on a t)"o-run doul1k by Bob- ing here." Strawberry said . ."I like
lnwag:en's.one·out shot over the bag Ranl'.;hurg "--ruek out. hut the ball got ' by Higginson,
playing in New '(mk, period. I'm o1•er Belpre in Tri-Valley Conference inning on a single to Adams a stolen
·Ohio Division softball action Friday hase and a base hit off the b"t of
· at first scored-Ryan Ramsburg with · past t,he c:11cher anJ rolled to the
"He said something to me and I pretty excited about being back."
Foraker.
: the winning run. a" Meigs defeutcd hachlllp aJ iuwing Ram~burg to re;;u.:h said ..;omeihing b:.1ck.'' Girardi said.
Strawberry hit his fifth homer. and at Mergs High SchooL
Mcig'
wok
a
4-0
kml
in
the
secMeig' added two more runs in the
Belpre 3·2 in eight innings in TVC first. Ram~hurg ad .vanct:d to 'ccond
Momenls earlier. Tigers manager Scott Brosius had three hits and drove
ond
inning
.
Tangy
Laudcrmill
hottom
llfthe third inning Ill increase
baseba ll action Friday evening at base on a wild pitch selling the stage Buddy' Bell argued with plate umpire in two runs.
reached
on
an
error
.
Ill
lead
oil
the
the
lead
to o-1. Two walks. a licldcrs
.. Meigs Hi£h School.
for V;anlnwagen's heroic,.
Jim Evans. daiming New York
Keagle (0-4) gave up 10 hils
inninj.!.
Amber
Vinin~
follnweU
wi1h
(See MARAUDERS on B-5)
It was revenge in a big way for
Aaron in his on ly plate appl'arance reliever Mike Stanton had hit Joe before gelling the· final. nul in the
Meigs, as the Marauders dropped a of the game. lined a one -two pitch Randa with a pitch in apparent retul- third. railing behind 5-0, '
21-0 decision to the Gulden Eag,b over the fir" base hag and into the iation for Doug Bochtler plunking
"I just couldn't make a pitch."
on April 1 in 1he ~oieason's second corner. allowin~ Ram~hurg. to jog Tino Martinez.
Keagle said. " I just hung a changegame.
-- ·
home with the winning run.
"Why Martinez thinks we hit up to Strawh\'rry. ~ ·
,
Belpre took a 2-0 le;td in the third
Bent ley wcntthe route to pick up hint is idiotic." Bell said. "I think
David Cone (2-1) did not allow a
mnrng. Brad West walked. and Kyle the" in. the ju111or pitched a fotn· hit - Tino Man inez is too good a player to hit until the fourth. He gave up three
Hamrlton was hit by " pitch Both · ter. struck nu t 13. walked erght and think we're throwing at him. What hit~ in 6 113 innings and raised his·
. , runners movcd. up on stolen buses · hit two hatt ers . Jeremiah ahn lctlthe . did li&gt;e Randa have to do with.this 0 "
lifetime record against the Tigers to ·
and then scored on a base hit niT Ihe Marauders "' the plate with a pair of
"If there's a reason to do it. fine. 11-1. including a victory last Saturbat ofZack Keith.
. singles. Mart IlL Vanlnwagen and I understand it," he said. "But this'! day against Keagle.
But Meios came hack in the bot- Davenport each adtled ;ingks.
For whal 0 "
'
Mariano Rivera. in his first game
tom of the f.ming to the game at :!-.
Steve McGuire was the IMing ·
Yankees manager Joe Torre said since injuring his righ1 groin on
' all. Brad Davenport and Kyle Smid- pitcher. in rel ief or Josh Strothm. all the fuss was for nothing.
April 5. pitched the ninth for New
die both walk~d. Pat Martin and Jere- The two gave up stx hus and walked
"They hit Tino .and we hit Ran- York. Before the game. he had a plasmi"h Bentley followed with hack -to- five . Bradford had a double to lead da." he said. " I don't know what tic. toy hard hal in his locker. the
back singles tn make it a :!-1 game. Belpre. Keith. McGuire and Strothers Buddy was so upset about."
·
· same ktnd that was passed around the
Smiddie then came into score on :t added "ngb lor the Golden Eagles.
A crowd of 26.173 that included Yankees front office as a joke earliMeigs 19-5 overall anJ 6-5 in the several &lt;tther. hard hats mod Mayor er in the week.
' sacrifice lly off the bat of Tony
Dugan.
TVCI. wludt hosted South Web,ter Rudolph Giuliitni - he was in a
Note!i: The Tigers claimed infieldBelpre broke the rie in the fifth in u double header on Saturday. Wtll front -row seat next lo the Yankees . er lefT Manto on waivers from Cleveinning. Steve McGuire singled ancl travel In Vinton County on Munday. dugout - ~aw New York win its land and designated pitcher Scoll
, (&lt;yle Bradford h1llowed with a dou - · In nine totals
founh in a row and improve the AL's Sanders (0-2. 17.69 ERA) for assignble to deep left field. McGurre then .lklpre
U02 -01{l-!MI=30~03
best record at 13-5.
ment ... The Yankees matched their
scored the gn ahead run on a b:tng- Meigs
·002-000-11 =4-6-0 .
Detroit has lost th!ee straight and best ~tart in 10 years.
bang play at th~ plate on" p:tsscd ball
Belpre: Josh Strothers, Steve - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - to give Belpre the lead.
_ . McGurre 16) and Steve Spnggs
Kyle Smidtlie led off the se1•enth
Mergs: Jcrenu:oh Bent ley and J. T.
COMPLETES
inning with a walk and then moved Humph reys
I
JUNIOR SEASON 4 Dr., air, PW, PL.
~ -1!' second on a passed hull. Dugan
WP-Bcntlc)
~9801700 ..................... ..
'· tlkn qme up with :t big two out smLP-McGui re
Robert Morris volleyl ·Discount. ....... :.... ,. . .... .... ...........
'"'
, ~~~ into right lield to score Srniddie
ball player Misty Cole-

1

'

~ ·

' ·• \i.

Meigs softb;~ll crew
outlasts Belpre 7-4

nal

~ays

Don't

Be A
.part

.

Irwin takes one-stroke lead
in Las Vegas Senior Classic

,
'
Irwin. winner of last week's PGA
Seniors' C~ampionship and the
defending Las Veg;tS champion .
played nawlessly before bogeying
the final hole to cap a S-under 67 thai
put him at 7 under. A stroh behrnd
' was Colbert and semor rookte Buzz
Thomas.
. ..
"I like the way thinj,'s are gmng,
Irwin said. "It's a nice carryover
rrom last week."
Irwin. who .started !he day 2
under. didn'l make a i,istake until_the·
final hole. when he eft a shot Ill _a
greenside bunker and made only htS
•' .econd bogey of the tournament . He

~

'''

'&gt;
't
''•

Savings

It!

man (Gallia Academy.
'95) completed her
junior season last fall
with the Colonials.
The six-foot middle
hitter appeared In 31
matches, recording 21
kills and 10 errors for
a .129 hitting percentage.

~§~~~~~~~~]~;

1997 DODGE IHlREPID Air,
1997
tMXIMA Powtr
1997 HISSAN
DODGE STRAlUS
1996 CHl'IY MOtllt CARlO One
1996 DODGE STRATUS ES LoacXd, Vb...........................~................... $11,911
1"1 NISSAN ALTIMA. GXE Loac:Jtd.................................................. $11,911
1997 DODGE StRATUS 5 Speed, Air .....................~..........................$10,911
.1995 PONTIAC GRAt!l&gt; PRIX Air, M\IFM............................................. $9,91f
1997 MISS.AN StHTRA Low Mlles........................................................$9,M
1M4 FORD CROWN VICTORIA·LX loac:Xd......................................... $9,9H
1994 HISSAH ALTIMA GXE Automatic, Air ..................~...................... $8,981
t 993 CHRYSlER LciAROH CONY Red, Loedtd ..................- .............. t7,988

event ·

'•

Miss Out
On 1'he

ot

· maJe si' birdies. including three in
l ; By TIM DAHLBERG
LAS VEGAS (AP)- It may he ;.1 row on hi . ; hark sic.le.
The pl"y wa&lt; typical of the kind
• Jim Colbert's course, but it\ Hale
1
of year lru. in j, havin}:!. coming off a
'; Irwin's tour. .
Colbe.rt. at home on a hometown seas(m that 'aw him win nine limes
course. shot a 7-under-par 65 Frid:ty and make more than $2 million on
in the Las Vegas Senior Classic IO lhc ...cni~1r circu i.l.
So far this year. Irwin h:ts won
move into contention ror his fir, I vic·
two
of the six tournament!&lt;~ he has
tory since proslat~ cancer forced
played.
hasn't finl,hed worse
him to take an extended hreak Irom
than li
competitive golf.
.
But it was Irwin. the domrnant
player for the last year and a half on
the senior tour. who had a one-stroke
lead midway through the 72 -hole ·

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1996 JEEP CHEROKEE lAREDO ••4, Loaded~.................,...~ ............ t11,,..

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tH7 JEEP WRAtGLER Hardtop ..............~ ..........................................$141M
1H4 DODGE RAM 1500 4x4 ............................................ ............... $1t,fli
1994 TOYOTA 4x4 NNFM Casstttt ...................................... A ........... $11,911

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A.stro cumrs111 VII

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Mystery surrounds
creatine as FDA
issues warning

Gift triggers memories
of Clemente's heyday

Yankees return
to repaired stadium,
defeat Tigers 8-4

Meigs tops Belpre ·
:4.3 in eight innings

Pomeroy • ~lddleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, April26, 1998

April is a.monlh of celebration in our family. II
seems that every other day brings a birthday or
anniversary to celebrate, and that doesn't include
the Easter holiday. It's the rile of spring, and it can
get expensive.
·
By GARY STRAUSS
Nutrition and General Nutrition.
and GARY MIHOCES
I am always perplexed abo~l what to get my
which operate more than 3.000 GNC
nephew for his 'birthday. He likes anything I get
USA TODAY
Jetoil outlets.
him, but I always want to make his day special. You know, get him some- ,
Hyped by professional athletes
"Here's a protein that can help
thing his parents won' t like the time I wenllo Nashville, Ind., and bought and heavily trumpeted in glossy improve ability 10 work at a higher
him a rubber band gun so he could shoot my sister.
.
health and fitness publications. crea- intensity and perform more intenseAndrew.liked it, but my sister wasn'lloo thrilled about dodging prqjec- tine's marketing hoopla and word or Ly at sports." said GNC spokesman
tiles for three mpnlhs. It took her that long to realize the gun wouldn't work mouth among jocks has made it one John Troup. "We've studied it for
of the fastest-growing sport~ nulri- some time. We've been unable to find
'without rubber bands.
That was ages ago, but it still brings a smile to my face . This year, I tional supplements or the 1990s.
any study that can demonstrate a seriordered him a special baseball jersey from the Cooperstown Collection. PerBut creatine's
as the new ous problem or a high level or consonally, I like the old Negro League uniforms, bull decided lo stick with the muscle candy could soon change.
cern."
·
major leagues for Andrew.
With use ·becoming widespread
Muscle Trihe. a Salt Lake City11 was a difficult choice, ·because I had to decide among numerous play- among high school and college ath- ba.,ed direct mail marketer..said a hot
ers and teall)S. I finally sellled on the Pillsburgh Pirates' No. 21, Roberto letes. the Food and Drug Adminis- market among users are elderly conCiemente.
tration issued a warning last we~k sumers who have heard it can stem
1 saw Clemente play quite a few times in Wrigley Fi~ld. 'Eve~ time he that anyone planning to use creatine · muscle atrophy.
approached the plate, he moved his head like he had spen~ the mght ~leep- ' should first consult a physician or
·" Right now. we're probably selling on the wrong side oflhe bed. He hit, ran and played nght field hke no health care professional. The FDA ing $80.000 of products a month. and
other player I had ever seen. He had an arm without pee~.
.&lt;,lisclosed to USA TODAY thai il is about hair is creatine," said
One of my earliest memories of Clemente was waJchtng NBC's ~arne of exploring whether creatine is linked spokesman Jeff Dunyon. " Month in
the week. It was 1966 and Dodger great Sandy Koufax was worktng on a to grand mal ·seizures in two users and month out, it's our best-selling
'
shutout in the ninth inning at Forbes Field. The Dodgers were always on the and a tumor in another.
product.
game of the week because tHey we·rc world champions, and there was no one
The FDA and the National ColleCreatine's image was burnished
.
giate Athletic Associ.ution also are when several Denver Broncos
beller than Kourax. Regretfully, it was to be his last sea_son.
The game's final score was 4-1. Clemente htl a lowenng home run 10 rutn investigating whether creatine .Played appeared on national TV following ,
Koufax's bid for a shutout.
a role in the deaths or three college the Super Bowl. wearing baseball
Like Koufax, Clemente's career was cut short. Not by injury, but by wrestlers. although NCAA invesli· caps with the EAS logo of Golden.
death. He died in 1972 trying to help ihe victims of an earthquake in Man- gators note that creatine may not have Colorado-based nutritional suppleagua, Nicaragua.
.
.
been a factor because all three were ment marketer Experimental and
. Andrew ealled to thank me for his birthday pres~nt. To my surpnse, ho_w- also on intense training or ··weight- Applied Sciences.
.
cver, he had never heard or Clemente unit I he recetved my present. Imagme reducing regimes. Arid despite wide"A'ccording to all the research
. .that! I was shocked! I guess I'm older than I reahz~!
.
spread use among professional ath- I've read and the people I've talked
1 still remember Clemente's great performance tn the 1971 World Senes letes. the Association or Profession- to, iJ seems to be a fuirly benign supagainst the Orioles. Along with Willie Stargel.l, Stev~ Blass and a young al Team Physicians said that 85 per- plement in the sense of harmful
Bruce Kison, the Pirates overcame a 3-1 deficit to wm the senes In seven cent of its members won't recom- effects." said Broncos trainer Steve
games. Clemente, however, was the real star. .
. .
mend creatine until more studies are Antonopulos. "The only negative
. The jersey became a learning experience for my nephew. Upon recetvmg . . done on its effects.
thing. and it really hasn't been
it, he looked up Clemente in the local library and read all about hts career
Creatine supplements. initially shown. at least from what I can see.
and life.
.
. .
.
marketed to weight lifters and body- is the long-term effects. what it 's
During our conversation, he told me how trag~ tl w~ that Clemente dted builders. have been around ror near- going to do down the line. But at thi s
so young. He told me how the encyclopedia descnbed htm as a great human- ly two decad~s.
point, the researchers don't think
. :itarian. He also told me-how lucky I was to s~e Clemente play.
Considered a safer. legal alterna - that's a concern."
: . My nephew was right. All of us who saw htm play were lucky. II was only tive to steroids. creatine is taken by
While several Broncos use crea: :then that I realized how fortunate I had been. ·
.
.
athletes in a variety of sports as a per- tine, Antonopulos said the FDA
. : The most important part .of my nephew's present was the gtft I re_cetved. rormance-enhancing supplement on warning is appropriate. "That prob; ·we all giye gifts to please our loved ones, but il never crossed my mmd that the belief ihal it builds muscle mass. ably makes a lot or sense. especially
::Andrew's gift 'was more for me than for him.
. .
.
strength and enduranco. A month's young athletes. On any type of sup: · To tell you the t~lh. I'm h~Bki~g forward to orgamzmg my Chnstmas supply typically costs S1S to $50.
plementation. thai wQuld be approlist. I wonder what gtfts that wtll brmg.
· Creatine is a staple among many priate."
Overall. the sports community's . .
Sam wu.on. Ph.D. II an aNOCiate profeuor of hlllory at the University of pro spons teams. such as the San
Rio Grande. An avid l8n of all aporl8- and 1 nnr maniiCII follower of baaket· Franctsco 49ers. whtch S[mrt.v 1//n.v- acceptance or creatine is mixed. Said
batt - ·he 11 allllllve of Gary, told., and a graduate of Indiana University- which rwre~Pi
· H. t reponed has "tubs" of 11
Bill Bryan. senior team physician for
ahould tell ruclora 801Mlh1ng abaut Where hie head (and Hooller h..rt)la.
·ar 6nd. lis proponents jnclude
baseball's Houston Astros: "Creatine
e
sers such as Denver Broncos improves your ability to work out.
qu erback John Elway and Balti- (But) it does cause you to retain flumore Orioles outfielder Brady Ander- id. and m0St of tbe weight gain you
son.
experience is from ihe water you
. not museIe mass...
· I as become so popular thai it's relatn,
no
a SHIO million business.
There's no club policy banning its ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The recognition. Award applications are
for
about
10
percent
or
a
·ounting
use,
however. "Some of the guys _like
Ohio Divisioo of Wildlife issued available at many fishmg hcense out· tl e $ i billion sports nutritional busiit
because
it gives them a boost when
· 14.000 outstanding catch awards to · lets and- from the Division or
ess.
said
Scoll
Dempster
of
industhey
go
back
to the weight room . ...
, :anglers panicipating in its 1997 Fish Wildlife.
, ry tracker Packaged Facts. Among That's both physically and psycho- ·
Ohio program.
creatine's leading marketers: Weider. logically beneficial."' Bryan said.
There were 235 Master Angler
awards given to anglers who caught
four or more different species or
award-qualifying fish during the year.
In 1996. the di1•ision issued
14,100 Fish Ohio and 214 Master
Angler awards.
Among the i7 species or fi,h eligible for recognition in the Fish Ohio
progmm. 5.820 awards. or 42 percent. were given for outstanding
catches of walleyes thai measured at
least. 2M inches. Sunfish ( I .600).
.
.
crappie ( 1.490). largemouth bass
(6!l0) and yellow perch ,(680) were
:tmong the other top species c:ttegories for which Fish Ohio awards
.were issued last year.
There were 68 a\llards given for
. :outstanding catches of non hem pike,
: a category that was add~d last year
• ror Fish Ohio recognition. The new; ly combined rainbow troutlsteelhead
; ·lroul category produced 350 angler
·!I ward'\.
· In addition to certilicates. :tnglef!'
·
a Fish Ohio hat pin in recog'nition ror their first qualifying catch
·or the year. Sevenleen species ?f
·game fish are eligible for Fish Ohto

-""ll"

Oh.io DO.W gives 14,000
OUlStanding catch awards

"

Marauders ..•

(Continued from B-4)
·
"choice and a single by Vining plated
)he Marauder runs.
.
• : Mei~~ added another mn m _the
,• .,;ixth inning on a base hal br Wtgal
, .ilnd a Belpre error In_gt~~ the
; ,t.tarnuders a 7-I le"d headtng mto the
• final inning.
.
: . Belpre plated three runs on smgles
by Adams. Mays. Lawson and a
· ; ,t.tei~s ~r · to pull to wnhm three.
, But Belpre could not get any closer.
: ~ L:tudermih was the 'winning pitch· .
: Cr givinj! up nine hits. widki_nl! three
1 pnd striking out ••!'ht. Me1gs only
I had four hits led by Wigal with a dou!·lite and a single. Vining added two
I Singles, .
·
.
1 Adams was the losinj! P•"her
1 gi~ing up four hits. five walks. while
itrikinJ! ool five.' ~ays had a double
I1 And
a single to lead Belpre. Ad~ms
added a pair of singles. ·
The Maraudet;&lt;' Tonya ~i~\er
1 injured her ankle m lhe firth mmng
' and missed ·the. rest of the contest.
: The extent of the injury is not ~nown
• al this time.
! Meigs will play at Vi.nton County
• on Monday.

ATTENTION:
.
GM OWNERS
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Or Truck From 1986 till now and
still retain you will be entitled tQ a
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This _is in addition to any Factory
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- Se~ our Sales S!aff Today for
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95 FORD T-BIRD 17272, 30,000 mlltl, bal. of fact warranty,
A/T, A/C, Jill, cruise, PW, PL, P. seal, aport wheflla ........ $11,895
97 FORD TAURUS GL 17270, 21,000 miles, bal. of fact. warr.,
A/C, A/T, tllt, cruise, PW, P. seat... ......, .............................$13,995
96 FORD TAURUS GL 17255, 30,000 miles, bal. of tact.
warranty, tilt, cruiH, aport wheels, A!J, A/C, P. equlp... $12,995
96 CHEV. CAVAUER 17104, 34,000 miles, bal. of fact. warr.,
red, AfT. A/C, AM/FM, rear defroster.:................................. $9995
96 CHEV. CAVAUER 17197, 35,000 miles, INti. of tact. warr.,
AfT. A/C, AM/FM CD, sport wheels .................................. $10,300
et PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE (wide track) 17244, 21,000
milts, bal. of fact. warr., A/T, A/C, ,lilt, cruise, PW, PL...S17,660
96 CHEV. MONTE CARLO m1&amp;, 34,000 mllas, bal. of filet
warr., AfT, A/C, Jill, cruiH, PW ......................................... $12,935
87 GEO METRO 17149, Red, 20,000 miles, bal. offact. warr.,
A/T, AJC ................................................................................. $7995
85 FORD CONTOUR 17171,33,000 mlltl, bal. aflact. wart.,

AJC, Clll., rear defrolter ..............................'...................... $8995
II' HONDA CMC OX 17188, 28,000 mlln, bal. of fact warr.,
A/T, crulae, power windows &amp;locks...........................:... $10,895
DODGE AVENGER 17263, 33,000 ml!ll• bal. of fact. warr.,
till, cruise, AM/FM CD, power wlndowa ......................... $13,995
95 !.(ISSAN ALTIMA 17173, Green, bal. of fact warr., AfT, A/C,
tltt, crUise, PW, PL...........................................:.................$10,99:5
95 DODGE INTREPID m73, V-6 eng., AfT, A/C,IIh, cruiH,
PW, PL ..................................................................................$9495
12 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE 17267, Rild, AfT, A/C, till, power
windows &amp; locks .................................................................. $5495
97 DODGE INTREPID m69, A/C, A/T, tift, crulu, power ·
windows, locks, casselte............................................. ,... S12,895
97 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 17245, Gretn, AfT, A/C, AM/FM, .
Uh, cruise, power wlndowa &amp; locka ................................ $13,243
96 OLDS CIERA 17219, A/T, A/C, 1111, crulu, power wlndowl &amp;
locb........................................................................:........:....$9140
96 CHEV. CORSICA 17158, V-6 eng., AfT, A/C, till, power
·
window• &amp;locks ..............................~................................;.$8995
115 BUICK CENTURY 17155, V-6 eng., AfT. A/C,tlll, cruise,
poW.r windows &amp; locka .......................:.............................$99411
95 FORD TAURUS GL 17248, Green, AfT, A/C, llh, cruise,
·
power wlndowt ....................................................................$9895
95 CHEV. CAMARO 17215, Green, T-tnoa, Hn, cruise, A/C,
cutettt, aport whetlr......................................:............... $11,277
95 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 17191, WhHe, leather P. Hit,
A/T, A/C, IIH, cruise, PW, PL ............................................. $1.3,645
95 FORD T·BIRD 17207, Green, V-8 eng., AfT, A/C, 1111, cruise,
PW, PL, P. seat, apart wheela ...........................................$11 ,800
PONTIAC GRAND AM 17265, AfT. A/C,IIII, cruiH,
PL,

94
NEW YORKER 17200, Leather power IUt, AfT,
AJC,IIIt, cruiH, PW, Pl., aport wheels ............................ $10,600
12 DODGE DYNASTY LE 17234, VI eng., AfT, A/C, Jill, crulu,
PW. PL........................,................................................~ ........$5495
13 DODGE INTREPID ES 17148. Blue, AfT, A/C, till, crulu,
PW, PL, P. Hills, aport whllela ........................................... $9995
94 MERCURY SABLE 17257, V-6 eng.• AfT. A/C, till, cruise,
cauettt ................,..........................:.................................... $8495
92 CHEV. LUMINA 17260, V-6 eng., AfT. A/C, tlh, cruise,
cauette ............................................................................... ·$5995
97 CHEV. IIAUBU LS. 17276, "Loaded', 28,000 miles, INti. of
fact. warr.nty .............................................. :..................... S14,900
96 FORD TAURUS GL 17277, 19,000 miles,
llltlence of fact. warranty ...........................:......................$t3,415

iM'I

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.
tonnnu
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93 NISSAN KING CAB 17092, Rear ftlp sella, AM/FM, rear
lllder, AIC, btdllntr, aport wheels ..................................... $6995
95 FORD RANGER 17221, Auto. trans, AM/FM culllte,
bedlintr.................................................................................$5995
93 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB 17225, V-6 eng., A/C, rear ftlp
Hat, XLt
crvllt, sport wheela .................................... $7995
95 CHev.' 5-10 17t54, Rid, AII/FII, sport wheels ............. $7995
95 NISSAN TRUCK n122. Purple, A/C, caaselte, bedllner,
rear allder ............................................................................. $8900
95 NISSAN K/C 4X4 noos, AIJ, A/C, V-6 eng., rear ftlp seats,
bedllner, rear lllder,llll, cruise, aport wheels................ $13,995
93 TOYOTA T-100 4X417096, Red, 8' bed, A/C, cutette,
bedliner, rear llldlr..............................................................$8995
96 FORD RANGER 17140, 31,000 miles, bal. of fact. warr.,
AJC, rear slider, aport whtlla .................:........................... $9882
96 FORD RANGER 4X4 LONG BED n190, V-6 eng., PJC, aport
wheell, XLT, 22,000 miles, INti. of fact. warr................... $13,962
96 CHEV. 5-10 172&amp;4, Whlla, lld!l cab, V-6 eng., TahOe Pkg.,
caaltllt, A/C, tapper, aport whtlla ................................... $8495
96 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB XX!l:~T~m~-~32~.''..~~.:~~:~~,;
caaltlle sport wheels, rear ltlp 11
96 CHE'i. 5-1017254, Extra Cab, 3rd door, red, LS. Pkg.,
eng., AJC. Clllfltt, btdllner,lporl whtlla ................... $12,995
96 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB 17230, XLf. purple, A/C,
cruise, tilt, PW, PL, relt' lllder,aport wheels,
rear 111p ....._....................................................................$11,995
95 CHEV. 5-10 EXTRA CAB 17233, LS. Pllg., blue, AfT, cau.,
btdllner, sport whftls ......................................................St0,995
961'0AD F-150 4X4 XLT 17249, Bilek, AfT, A/C, tift, cruiH, V-8

un.

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of fact warr., ltllllldlng door, AIJ, A/C, un, cruise, PW, PL.
lugOIDf I'IGk ............- .......................................................$19,900
97 DODGE CARAVAN GRAN VAN S.E., AfT, A/C, lin, crulu,
PW PL. - AJC left eliding ctaor, rooii'IGk, 28,000 miles,
of fact . , :.............................................................. $19,900
• CHEY. LUMINAAPV 17243, Gretn, AfT, A/C, Jilt, cruise,

INti:

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• FORD WINDSTAR GL m41, 17,000 mlltl, INti. cl fact.
werr., reel, Atf, NT, lin, crlutl, PW, Pl............................$16,750
10 PONTIAC TRANSPORT 17221, VI eng., AfT, A/C, 1111.
crYie, PW, PL....- ...............................................................SIIIS
• FORD WIIDSTAR GL!17203, V-6 eng., 7 pau., AIJ, AJC, 1111,
~Mat. PW, PL..........................................................."...... S15,315
112 PLVIIOUTH VOYAGER 172t2. blut, A//T,
7

�•
••

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, Aprll26, 1998

1

NIJA playoffs continue first-round play

Bulls edge Nets 96-93 in

t h ~m a minuh.' l~ n

or;

stole lhe ball from Kerry Kitties on a
.drive and raced down lhe cour1. He
soared through the air and dunked as
. Kendall Gill slapped at him. Jordan
made·the free throw, giving lhe Bulls
a 94-91 lead with 43.5 seconds I.Ct.
Jordan gave New Jersey one lasl
chance when he made one free throw
bu t missed the second with 13.4 seconds left. But Douglas tried '!!! offbalance three-pointer with abo ut J
seconds remaining lhat mi ssed badly. Sc,olt ie Pi ppen gra bbed the
rebmind and the Bulls had escaped.
Pippen had 24 for. the Dulls.
Gatl ing led the Nets wi th 14. including 13 in th e foun h quar1er.
Chicago's near- loss was lhc hig hlight of the night as four. more opening games were played on the &lt;econd
night of postseason act ion. In other
games, the Los Angeles Lakers edged
Portland 104-102. Miami handled
New York 94-79 and Scaule trounced
Minnesota 108-83.
Lukers 10~
Trail Blazers IOl
At Inglewood, Calif.. Kobe
in overtime. Jordan Bryant scored II of hi s 15 points in

'

.

second period and added an empty
·nel goal us the Devils evened the
se ries.
Dave Andreychuk :ilso scored and
Marlin Brodeur had 27 saves as New
Jersey snapped n five-game playoiT
losing streak dating to last season.
Chris Murray had an early goal lor
the Senators. who are trying to
become only the third eighlh seed to
knock orr a Nd I seed.
Flyers 3, Sabres 2
. At Philadelphi a. John LeClai r's
game-winner with 3:32 left in the
thin! period was the Flyers' first power-play goal on their eighth chance of
the game and it evened rhe series.
Eric Lindros. who ass isted on
LeClair's goal. and Chris Gmtton
also scored for Philadelphia. which
got 25 sa ves from Sean B~~rke .
Dominik Hasek made 35 saves for
Buffalo, whi ch trailed 1-0 go ing int o
lhe lhird period. hut tied it up wilh
goals by Michal Grosek and Di xon
Ward.
Avalanche 5, Oileni l
At Denver. Peter Forsberg had
two goals und three ....si., ls. v..leri
Kamensky hud lwn J;nals and Sandis
Ozolinsh had three assists for the
Aval.,nche in the penalty- and li ght' • ·
nlled game.
Joe Sakic. who missed the series
opener while serving a one-gal\le sus·
pension for a knee-on-knee hit on
Detroit's Kris Draper in the final regular-se.,snn J;ame, scored a critical
shorthanded goal after Ed111,onton
had cui Colomdo's lead tn2 -1 in the
sccnnd peritKI.
Bill Guerin scored both Edmonton
goals. each when the Oi lcrs had a
two-man advantugc.

and Los Angelc..; is at St. Lou1.,, Montreal ;md S1. Loui ' wun tho;..c "-Cries
opener&gt;. .
Pat Verllee k " ·orcd two nf ilHIIa&gt;
four power-play goals and Ed Bellour
stopped 18 &gt;hots in his 37th career
playnfl win.

~

·':•
-~

•
•'

.'
~
..•..

into the game .to give D"ll'" a 1-0
lead ;md Deri;m Hatcher made it ~ -0
just 28 sec&lt;&gt;nd.s later.
" I think it's ridiculous." Hatt· her ·
said of the Sharks' rnughhuu..., play.
·· 1 L:no w · il'"i no t what lht: lc;aguc
wants. They need to look at some of
lhe Things that went on here tonight."
Dill Houlder scored fur S"n Jose
wilh 1 2:,1~ lefi in the th ir~ peri&lt;Kito
break the shutout.
"Our liest players arc not playing
as hard as their hest players," Sutter
said. " Mayhe this (the playoffs) is
such a big hurdle for our team."
In other playoff games "Friday.
each of which evened Ihe series 1-1.
it was Boston 4. Wa!!llington 3:
Phoe.ni x. 7~ Detroit 4: New Jersey 3.

--Sports

'

~

~

.,••
~

Heat 94, Knick.• 79
At Miami. it was ~~ co mparati ve ~
ly lmnquil night for lhe two te&lt;~ lns
with a hi story of clashes and contro-

•

•

•

80

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Bedroom ......... 512.60 Dead BoiL.....51

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keyless entry. Loaded!

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driver's seal, auto. lamps,
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casl
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wiper.
rear defroster.

1992 MERCURY

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cruise, PW, PL, AM/FM stereo
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or 245-5316

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1998*

..

Pick-Up

windows, power locks , AM/FM cruise, power windows, power
stereo cassette, cast aluminum locks, AM/FM stereo cassette,
wheels, rear 6efroster.
aluminum wheels, rear
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V6, PS , PB, air, tilt, cruise, power 4 Dr., V6, auto., PS, PB, air, .tilt, ·

4 cyl., automatic, air, PS, V6, . automatic,
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WIRE MESH

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1994 GEO METRO 1993 FORD ESCORT
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Open Monday thru Friday 7:30am 1114:30 pm.
Saturday 7:30 am-12 noon

•

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(up to 48 months to qualified

UMESTONE
TOP SOIL . MUSHROOM
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COMPOST

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MINERAL SURFACE

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V6 eng., auto., air, tilt,

Gas Heaters Are Glass Lined
5-Year Warranty.
NOX-Code Approved
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40 gal ........................................ 5

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(GAS at'ld ELECTRIC)

TIMBERS

5V
AND

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PHONE 992·21 96

LANDSCAPE
.
.

szas....

.

· LEANING on one's opponents can't be helped sometimes, espe- :
clally when falling, as Chicago's Michael Jordan (right) finds out while!
trying to gel the rebound away from New Jersey's Kerry Kittles (cen- • ·
ter) during the fourth quarter of their llrst-round series opener Frt-l
day night in Chlcpgo, where the Bulls won 96·93 In overtime. (AP) ~ .

ENERGY SAVING
WATER HEATER

•9% flnancl•ll

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Create a handsome border fence
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SEEDER ··

sl

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SCOTTS® SPEEDY GREEN

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PL. cast aluminum wheels, power
drive.f's seat, AM/FM stereo cass.,
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power heated ·mirrors. remote
keyless entry.

briefs~

.
Skating
NORTH CHARLESTON. S.C.
(AP) - Olympic gold medalist Tall!
Lipinski •kated two perfect routines,
landing all jumps, to take the top
· prize in her professional debut at the
Skate. Rattle &amp; Roll Figure Skating
C~ampionships. - •
.
Lipinski led tht~~~~ghout the comthree-lime world s iiBonaly~ and ·
medalists Kararina
Baiul. Witt and
~ago, while
Bonaly Iosi rheir
by appel!ring in

.

·

Tim Hardaway scored 34 points
and Erik Murdock added 16 off the
bench as the Heat built a 2~- po int
lead and then withstood ·a Knick.s
comeback.
The opener had little of lh~ bi!d
behavior that has marked the ri v:1lry.
" With all the rhetoric and talk duri'ng the wee k. I got the feeling we
were playing in the fin.,J s." Hem
coach Pat Riley said. " W~ ' re in the
fi rst round . Miami -New York ob viously bri11gs oul a lot of f~c ling s. but
our guys got pas t that and just came
to play. We want to win. bur we' re
not trying to prove anything to the
Knick s."
'
SuperSonics 108
Tim berwolves 83
At Sennle, Vin Bilker h"d 25
points and 12 rebounds in his first ·

·s PRING SAVINGS NOW THRU MAY 9TH

~

V6 eng., auto , air, till , cruise, PW,

•lflckhoe
•Dozer
Work

Jere Lehtinen Sl.'orcd 8~ second:- .

•
'
:

•.

. . . .?-

-ODNEY, OHIO

'•

.

HOLLEY BROS.
CONSTR~fi~~~~O., INC•.'··

••Iiiii ~ shoncr. with fewer w h i~ tlc s . "
Tnni~ht . Mont real is at Piit,hurgh

•

Gary Payton added !9 points ~nd
; areer playoff game :1\ the Sonics
~pened a big first-half lead and ·seven assist~. and Detlef Schrempf :
got 17 points for lhe Sonic..
; ruised the rest of the way.
•
Anthony
Peeler's
3-for-18
shoot-:
"Yeah. I was nervous when I
&lt;tepped on the Ooor and I got cot- in(T was the m01jor f'itcwr in Min- :
tonmouth too soon. but thank good- ne~ota's .defeal as the Timherwolves, ;
ness it didn't affect my shooting." playing the founh playorr game in •
said Baker. who was 11 -for- 19 from ·team history, failed to get their first ;
. .
the noor.
postseason v1ctory.
'1

the last 8 1/2 minu res, Shnqui lle
O'N~al had 18. of hi~ 30 in the second half and Nick Van Exel made 'a
clutch three-pointer with 31.1 seconds lefi.
The Lakers won their 15th strJight.
playofl' game 'over Por1land at the
Forum. The Blazers' las1 postseason
victory there came in 1977 -the
year they won their only NBA tit le.
The Lakers went ahe"d for good
by scori ng nine stmight points to tu rn
a three-point defici t into a 93-87 lead
with a li ttle over lh ree minutes
remain ing.
Arvydas Saboni s made IWo free
throws wit h 1: 19 remain ing to draw
the Trnil Blazers wi thin one point. but
th at's as close as they would get.
Van Exel's three-pointer with 31.1
seconds left made it a' fo ur-poi nt ·'
game.
''I'm diMlppoinled," Isaiah Rider
said. " It 's not a confidence-bu ilder
fo r me on ly because I think we can
beat th is team. We had thi s game
wOn."

,.•

versies.

Stars hook Sharks .5-2; Flyers,
Devils, Bruins, Coyotes win
Otiawa I: Phlladelphi" 3. Bul'f:do 2:
anti Clllmado 5. Edmonton 2.
onl y nne in the NHL: s P&lt;» tsc'a&lt;t&gt;n to
Bruins 4, Cupitals 3 (2 OT)
ha\'e the sa m ~ \\ mnt'r in hn th ga m~s .
At Washington . D.arren Van lmpe,
It \ also lht!' seric:s that rou ld ge t the who had given the Bruins a 3-2 lead
ugliest.
with ~ : 57 lell in regul &lt;~ti on. scored 54
The Sta" he;ll the Shark&gt;.1-2 rri - second s into the second overtime to
duy night to go up ~-0 in th~ he st-of- e\•en the serie"i. The ove rtime playoff
se\•en series. and for tht' second loss was the o.;eventh straigh1 for 1he
strai ght game they lost a top l'ente r to Capital s. whn tied lhe game with 36
a quest ionahk San Jose hit.
second s lefl in reg ul ation when
" Both teams are bordering on run- Serge i 'Gorich:11 scored after the
ning O\'er the top emotion;illy." Dal- goalie hnd been pulled for an ex tra
Ins coach Ken Hitchcock .said. "The sknter.
emotions are ripe to mp nut. !t will
The Capit als. who had won their
probably g~ l el'cn more emotional in "'ast 11 horne ga!Jles. played most of
San Jose...
the game without 52'goal scorer .
Mike Mndann. who just &lt;ig-ned " Peter Bond ra. who skated fi ve shifls
$6 million a year cont r:K't wi th D"l- in the fi rst pe riod and did nol return.
las. sustai ned a mi ld concuss ion in a Bondra wa" till fee ling the effects of
second-period colli sion wi th Marcus a spra ined ankle from Game I.
·
Ragnarsson of the Sharks and did not
Coyotes 7, Red Wings 4
return.
AI Detroit. Keith T~achuk . JereModano said he will play in Game my Roenick and Rick Tocchet each
3 at San Jose on Sunday.
sco red twice for Phoeni•. which
" I gm hit in the ltJck of the head matched a franchise record for play·
with a stick. I was unconscious for off goals and evened the series.
Mike Canner also scored for the
about 30 serl)nds." Modano sa id.
" Doctors said my concussion was . Coyotes. who had seven goals in a 75 playoff win over Edmonton . in
slight and I will play on Sunday. •·
Modano .sai.d the way Sa'n Jose 1990. when lhey were the Winnipeg
plays " is rea lly an undi &gt;ciplined and Jets.
· .
selfish style they are playing. Ther - . Sergei Fedorov scored twice for
are ~:~k i n g dumh penalties and not Detroit. whil e• igor Larionov and
· playing sman . They are acring like Mathieu Dandenault each added a
they are untquchahle out there. ·You goal for the Red Wings, the defendcan' t wi n when you're in the penal- ing Stanley Cup champiOJlS.
ty box all nigh!. It 's just &gt;lupid."
·Phoe nix scored tw ice in the first
Dallas lost· top regu lar-&lt;eason period and blew the game open wilh
scorer Joe Ni euwcndyk li&gt;r at k ast four goals - two shorthanded - in
twn weeks after a fir&lt;t-period knee a six-shol sp"n of the second.
injury in Wcdnf\day night ·, -l-1 win.
Devils 3, Senators I
He w;IS hit by San Jose defenseman
At East Rutherford. N.J .. Doug
' Bry;111 Marchmcm.
Gilmour scored the winner lme in the
There w;l, no penalty on Marc hrnenfs hit anJ th er~ was none on
Mod:1no\ injury.
San Jose was penalilCu 21 t im~s
for 71 minutes Friday.
·· Mo~t of our pen all ic' ar~ retJ!ialion." Shark s coach Darry l Sutter
said. " I'd li ke to &lt;ee the next g" me

...

Lakers, Heat, Sonics also win

NHL playoffs continue first-round play

'
. By The Associated Press
The Dallas-San h)"'-' sL·ril'S 1s thc:

Pomeroy- • Middleport
. • Gallipolis,
. OH • Point Pleasant, WV

j

By CHRIS SHERIDAN ·
holdi ng a 14-pointlead.
AP Bas ketball Writer
New Jersey was without its two
Thm gu&gt;l of air emanating from leading scorers. Keith Van Hom tnuthe nation's midsection had nothing like symptoms) and Sam Cassell
to do with the weather.
(aggravated groin strain). and it
It was a collective breath of relief looked like the Nets would fade away
from all the Chicago Dulls fans who and play the par1 of humb le eighth
saw their dysfunctional dynasty tee- seed.
tering on the verge of an unspeakable
But thm wasn't what happened.
loS&gt;.
Led by Chris Gat ling. the Nets
The communa l psyche m the city scored 10 straight and went on a 16of Chicago was be iter today than it 1 run tci tie the game at RO with 4:10.
might have been. thanks to the Bulls ll'ft.
squeezing out a 96-9.' ov&lt;rtime vicWith the score tied at 89. Kerry
tory twer the ailing New krsey Neis Killks mi"ed for New Jersey wjth
in the opener of their best -of-live I ~ seconds left . but then denied Jarseries.
dan the lia ll as Chicago had a chance
"We wa lk away fee! in~ lucky In shtint for the win. Toni Kukoc endhaw cd up laking a long jumper thm
more so than anything.
gone eit her way. especia ll y in over- missed. and Sherman Douglas nea rtime." said Michad Jordan. who ly t oss~d in a 90-fom shot as the reg·
scnr~d 39 pnin t ~ :lnt.l ln :tlll' till' ~~lll ll."ulation hut.Ler sounded.
turni11g pl;1y in t h~ li nalminLIIt' lt f thl'
··c,mfusion. jusr lo tul confu sion.··
ext ra period.
Jordan said of what happe ned on the
There was no hin t of the srar,· to la&lt;t play. " That was a blunder &lt;lown
,_come t'arly in th~ fou11h 'IU; I r~t.·r allht• th ~o• strch: h. which is UOl'Ommo n for
Unitt"d CclliL'r ~I '\ Jlll'd &lt;J n \\ t._' lll In th.: . us . Aul it's StllliC'Ihing to learn rrom."
heJ,tch for a brc•at lwr \1 ith tlw Rull &lt;
With the &gt;mre tied at 91 and less

II '''"'"

Sunday, Aprll26, 1998

FLEX COIL PIPE
41NCH
100FT. ROPE

2.•

'

�•

.I:.J •
~88· ..

•

•

Outdoors
NRA banquet -passes $10,QOO mark for third straight yea~ L
I

..........

r

April 2$, 1998

I

~y ODIE O'DONNELL

DVP Correspondent

GALLIPOLIS - For the third
eonsecutive year the Friends of the
NRA Banquet topped the $10,000
(nark in fund rai sing events at the

Elks Lodge in Gallipolis on
Thursday night.
Some 150 people were in allendance at the event with the dinner
prepared by memb ers of Emblem
Club 199 and featurin g the sale of

over 60 auction items that ranged
from guns, equipment, to beautiful
outdoor paintings that were sponsored by local banks and business
organizations.
Philip Gray, NRA field represen·

J·. ac·kso' n c•lty 'Reservo .I r boasts' .
ODNR issues weekly fishing report

.

. f or bIueg1.II s saugeye
I Op ang I1ng'
·

. COLUMBUS '( AP) - Here is the
weeki) fi shing report submitted hy
th e Ohi o Dr, partment of Na1ural
Resources
Southeast
JACKSON CITY RESERVOIR
:_ Blu eg ill s range in size from
~even to II inches and can be caug~t
along the shoreline when using
small worms and larval baits. Trout
are being stocked for a special eve nt
and offer good fishing opportunitie s
throughout the spring . Catches of
J 5-ineh saugeye and walleyes up to
'90 inches have occ urred. This is also
6 good channel catfish lake.
' OHIO POWER RECREATION
~REA - The many small lakes
here offer a varie ty of fis hing experien ce s. Bluc~ills and sunfish arc
ahundant and "can be easil y caug ht
o n small worms a nd larva l baits .
;fhc abundance and quality of largclnouth ""'" varies wide ly from lake
io lake hut generally offers exce llent
~'tpri ng fishing action. Try the lake nl
Campground Area C when seeking
Chann el catfish. A recreation area
·user pcnm l is rcqui~cd in addition lo
'0 fi shin g license when fi shin g at
)Jhio Power lakes.
. ,
Muskingum River
.
• Try (ishing in heavy cover wuh
hlrnnows or small jigs in the Devola
Pool and Lowell tailwatcr wh~n
~eckin g crappies. Most of these fish
:Will average 10 to II inches. Usc
-small spinners or twister tail jigs to
catch white b.ass. Sauger fishi_ng is
· :best April through June when using
) wi ste rs or jigs tipp ~d with min 1IOWS. Opportunities to take channel
h tfi sh and spotted bass are rated
:excellent thi s year. ·
Southwest I
: LAII!E LORAMIE - Spring
1ishing for bullheads is best in the
~pper reaches of the lake. Most ft &amp;h
measure nine to 12 inches and can
}le caught when ·~sing traditional catfish baits along the lake bottom. The
brushy shoreline 'areas where new

·

vegetation is emcrgin~ .a rc goou
places to fish for crappies whit·h
measure up 10 1J inches . Usc min now s he neath a hohhet fi shed at
depths of three 10 eight feet li" hcst
fC!\U1lS.
PAINT CREEK LAKE - Tr y
using jigs and minnows fi sh!.!'d :tlun~
the suhmergcd points and drop-nils
adjac.cnt to llat areas when scekm~
saugcycs . Tite lake and the tail water
pool otTer gnnd fishing rm llathcad
and channd catfish . The fi&lt;wdt·&lt;l
timhcr ar~as an: the hcst spots dur·

.
lake is in Williams County. Crappie
fishing opportunities arc excellent
with most fish measuring six to 13
inches. Usc' minnows lishcd in &lt;lfeas
with suhmcrgcu structure for best
rcsttlts. Onnnrtunitics
to take chanIT
nel catfish. hlucgills and largemouth
h:1ss thi s sc~1son an: rated good.
Northeast
Li\Kt; MIL TO N - Walleyes ·
caught here avcrngc IK tn 20 inches.
Usc floating jigs or wcight~forward
s11inncrs tipped with a night crawler
at mcUium depth. Blue~ ills. crappies

ing the spring w !ish fnr

and L" han)lc l cul l'i'sh provide good

nappi~~ .

'

Central
sllllfclinc fishing action. Largemouth
ANTRIM LAKE - Th,· ~7 - mTc hass will average ahout 16' inches
lake in no rlhwcst Columhus oft'n" and l:i.ln he taken in sha llow water on
only shoreline fishing. whkll makl..'.s s urfa~:c plugs. small spinners. or arti - '
this a gnod place to take tlll\' il·c ' lidal and live haits.
anglers. The IOlke '"" hcen stocked
HIGHLANDTOWN LAKE ~
in n:t:cnt years' with rainhow trout Bluct:!ilb meas uri ng seven lO nine
and chan.nc l L:atfish. Usc ni ght iru:hcs arc commo nl y l'aught alo ng
crawlers or shrimp fished along the . the shoreline areas hy anglers ·usi ng
bottom w take channel catfish.
stnall worms and larval bait s. Usc
HOOVER RES ERVOIR - Usc minnows heneath a bohhcr ·fished in
minnows hcncath ~obhcrs or ;ucas with suOme rCcd · structu re
att4tc hcd to jigs in areas with suh- when seck in ~ crappie;. Channel cat~
merged hrushpiles in the middle and fish can he taken at ni ght when
upper hasins of the lake when seck- using traditional baits fished along
ine crappies. Look for white bass to the bottom . The outlook is rated
m;kc their 'spaw'ni ng run up Big exce llent for catfi sh and hlucgills
Walnut Creek below the dam. Most this year.
of these fish measure I0 to 14 inch· Lake Erie
es . Bluegil.l fishing should be good
Walleye action has dropped off in
lakewidc along the shoreline. Usc the Maumee and Sandusky ri vers
wax worm s, red worms and larva l and will con tinue to improve on
baits.
Lake Erie in the coming month s. ·
Northwest
When co ndition s perm it. walleye
LOST CREEK RESERVOIR anglers should continue to· work
Bluegills and crappies offer perhaps 'elver the reef CQmplex and around
the best fishing opportunities this the w~stern ·basin islands, in addition
season with some fish mc a~urin g to the Toledo shipping channel.
eight inches. Use larval baits and Previ ous surveys indicate anglers .
small worms fished beneath a bob- who are trolling these waters experiber along most shoreline areas for ence a higher catch rate compared to
best results. Fi shing opportunities angl ers who are drift fishing for
are rated fair fo r sauge yes, yellow walleyes. Many walleyes are susperc h. channel catfish. bullheads, pended at various depths and will
large rij outh bass and small.niouth respond to different lurt colors as
bass.
conditions vary from day to day.
· NETTLE LAKE - This 95-acre

tative from Chillicothe, presided .
over the event , assisted by NRA
Committee Members Larry Betz ,
II ill Medley, David Tawney, Scott Betz, Phil Hec.k and David
Wise'l'an.
Other committee members working the door prize events were Ed
Clary , Robbie Jenkins, Nick
Johnson, Ed Eissman, along with
Pam and Don Sheets from
Columbus.
.
Lee Johnson of Crown City
served as auctioneer, as all auction
items were displayed by University
of Rio Grande students Manda
Smith and Tammy Bays.
Recognition of corporate sponsors for prints and gu ns included
Farmers Bank, Ohio Valley Bank,

· DODGE·
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SE
Air, 5 speed, black, new
wheels &amp; tires.

96 PROBE 2 DR.
Black, 22,000 miles,
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Fully equipped, Rosewood .

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700

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WE .HAYE OVER 175 NEW AND USED VEHICLES
IN STOCK NOW FOR OUR BIGGEST EYER •• ~
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Come S":. Mike
Dwight Stevers, Pete Somerville, AI Durst,
Neal Peifer, Tim Conwell, Jamie Adameon, Jim Hamilton, Joe Tillie. Ted Brock

You'll Lt•• Our Quilt, wa, of .Dofn1 • ..,,,...,, .·
.

.

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE1I
·252 Upper River Rd.
.(61 446·0842

ERIN HENDERSON ALLEN ROSS ·DENIS J. KIRKBRIDE VINTON RANKIN STEVE SISSON PATRICIA SCHULDT .
Eliza Doolittle
· Col•. Pickering
Henry Higgins
Alfred P. Doolittle Freddy' Eynsford·Hill
Mrs. Pearce .

0~

ntOCK lrt STOCKII

tA'E

POMEROY, OHIO

9 am·l

'

•

(614) .992·6614. (800) 837·1094
9 111·5

..

1998CHEVY
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BLAZERS OR K2500 PICKUP
" JIMMY'SI
GMC
2 or 4 w•••l Drivel .. 2 or 4 Wheel Drivel
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414
Regular or
R~ular or
Heavy Duty
Extended Cab!
Extended Calli
2 and 4 Doors ·
10 Over
10 Over Invoice
$1 0 Over Invoice! s10 Over
•
1998 FULL SIZE
GMC AND CHEVY
PICKUPS! ·

1998 CHEVY
lYON

CREW CAB
Load~d, Silverado

1997 AND 1998
CHM S-1 O'S AND
GMC SONOMASI

1997' 1998
·CHM VENTURE

PONTIAC
TRA~SPORl

OLDS·SILHOUETTE·
YOUR CHOICE

1997 &amp; 1998
CHEVY ASTRO
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CAVALIER
OR

GMC SAFARI
VANS

PONTIAC
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YOUR CHOICE

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1991 CHEVY ·
MONTE CARLO
CHEVY LUMINA

1~l88 OLDS
INTRIGUE OR

1998 BUICK
LESABRE

PONTIAC
OR
OR
GRAND PRIX OR
BUICK CENTURY BUICK REGAL PARK AVENUE
,YOUR CHOICE

l 0 Over Invoice s1 0 Over

. YOUR CHOICE

1voicel s10 Over Invoice

..

Music by
Frederick Loewe
B'ook apd Lyrics by
Alan Jay Lerner
Ada~d ·from ·
George Bernard Shaw's
" Pygmalion"

$1 0 Over lnva~ic:eiS 10 Over .lnvalic:e I" 10 Over Invoice 10 Over Invoice
1998 CHEVY
MALIBU OR
T998 OLDS
CUTlASS OR
GRAND

.

•

PERFORMANCE: .
MAY ~.2,3 at 8:00PM
Fine Arts Center
University of Rio Grande
All Tickets $8.00
. for
. th'e
Merlyn G. Ross Scholarship Fund
No Reserved Seating

YOUR CHOICE

$1 0 Over lnvoiic:e

1997 CHEVY

--~ _MONTI CiRLO

'

·Gallipolis, Oh~
Or loU Free 1~800~446·0842

.

.

FEATURED PLAYERS:
Erin Henderson, Allen Ross,·Denis
Kirkbr_ide, Vinton Rankin, Steve Sisson,
Patricia Schuldt, Billy Hockman, Jason
Stout, Teresa Preston, Lynda Dunlap,
Bob Dunlap, Mary Sites, Fred
Sites,Jason Call, Aaron Hoover, Erica
Hoover, Cindy Anderson, Todd · · ·
Breyfogle, Jill.Burdell, Michael
Coleman, Christina Cogar, Jennifer
Dougal, Rosette Germ~n ; Teresa
Moor~. Tom Moore, Jason Potter, Jake
.Schuldt, Amy Taylor.

97LHS

97 NEON
PROGRAM CAR

.

Thoscattcndmgweretreated.to ~

Supreme luxury, Save $$$,
23,000 miles

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4 Dr., auto., air, Highline.

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huge d•splay of trap racks , buck
knives, Schrade Fillet. knives , r:J.
Beams, poc~et survtval tool "
scopes, deer huntmg packs, turkc_y
packs , duck huntmg packs, ·Peacocl&lt;
calls and a large ass':rtmen~ o.~ hantl
guns, shotguns, atr n cs an n es.•.,.:

DEAL!
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Automatic,
air, t!!al.

Nice, luxury, white, loaded!

Sundlly, Aprt1'2t. 1111'

RSR Enterprises brings MY FAIR LADY
to the University of Rio Grande

.

0
OVEtt
.InVOICE

850
97 MUSTANG

C

..'

93 CAVALIER

Black,
fully eq!Jipped.

$3,000 for improvment to the sh'oot_ing range at the Gallia County Gun
Club and $2,000 to the Galli a
County 4-H clubs for the purpose of
equipping a 4-H shooting club in the
county .
He stated that 70% of all NR~
montes IS used to prom~tc sh?Otm~
and gun safety programs m Ohto . .He
cited recent contributions to Canter'$
Cave and Chtef Logan Scout Ca111P:.
v.tus the Galha Co~nty donations. •

Section

•

,

_,

Peoples Bank. Star Bank, Gall.ia
County Gun Cliib and the Gallla
County Conservation Club.
Prize and drawing donq!ions ~ere
made by Big A Auto Pans, Robbte's
BP, O'Dell Lumber, Statewide Guns.
Tawney's Jewelry. Smokin' Robs of
Gallipolis, along with . Village
Sponcenter and Chuck Kirkpatrick'
of Powell, Ohio.
Kennison Saunders gave the
invocation prior to the dinner and
twoofGalliaCounty'soldestactiv.e
hunters Bob Evans and Ernie Null,
were p;esented wit~ engraved hunling knives in recognition of thetr
binhdays this year. Null recently
turned 90 and Evans is now 80,
In his brief address Gray noted
that the NRA recently donated

Along the River

"MUSICAL!
.
. A GRAND TOUR" by Denny Martin .Flinn
Question: What American musical adaptation took on a great
classic play (breaking a good rule- if it's not broken, don't fix it), ·
feat!Jre~ a leading hero who could not sing, was written by American
writers and staged by an American director, handling subject matter
what was quintessentially English, and didn't bother to include a
romance? In short, which musical did just about everything wrong its
·creators.could think of? You've probably gotit by .now- MY FAIR · ·
LADY (1956), one of the greatest
works
.
. of art ever assembled for the
Broadway
musical. stage, and at 2, 717 performances one of the most
.
popular.
· .
MY FAIR LADY may be the most interesting musiCal ever
produced on Broadway. A musical had never been built on a play like
. . [George Bernard Shaw's) PYGMALION: It was Shavian and polemic,
. -·~~ and-language was its strongest value. There seemed no place for songs
or dances; and the ending was upsatisfy.ing too. [After out-of-town ·
. · tryout performances in New Haven and ·Philadelphia, the ·box~office
advance was substantial .and the anticipation for the arrival of the show
in New York was. enormous.]
'
MY FAIR LADY opened on Broadway on' March 15, 1956.
was a smash hit, and subsequently ran for seven years: It crowned Rex
Harrison's career and made a star of its ieading lady, Julie Andrews.
The cast album became the bestselling Columbia album of any kind to
date (indicating how popular show music was in the mid-fifties), and
the best-selling cast album of all time. The musical paved the way for
musicals with plots revolving on something other than boy-girl
.
romance. It was and English story _in a musical which only Americans
could have-written. In any case, M~ FAIR LADY was the last great
musical play and marked the end of the· Rodgers and Hammerstein era.
:The- irascible, loquacious Henry Higgins [and
the
insecure, defiant and
.
.
ultimately self-defined Eliza Doolittle] remain ~e.gendary characters of
musical theatre.
.

~

..

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DIRECTED BY EDWARD ROARK
MUSIC SUPERVISION: MRS. EDIJ'H ROSS
COSTUIVJ:E MANAGEMENT: PATRICIA SCHULDT
'
By'Agreement
with
Tams-Witmark Music .Library, New York City, New York

'.

.Networks unleas.h· au·dience favorites for
· BJ MIKE HUGHES
Gannett Ne~ Service
As a new "sweeps" periQd begins. TV is bringing out all its favorites.
It has monsters and mobster.~. h ha.• magic and murder anti miniseries and

more.

\

.

.

Still, a loc of the viewer interest will be stirred up by regular series. Go
figure.
.
Certainly, lhe sweeps period - which started April 23- Ita.~ lhe usual
.
big-buck miniseries. .
" Merlin." which slarts Sunday, is almost as -big as NBC says it is. Com·
ing up is o~r required Mafia viewings, "The Last Don II" and "Witness to
1the Mob. " ·
·
Then there's Peter Bench ley's "&lt;ireaturc," not to be confused with Peter
Berichley's " Beast" or any plher creepy Bcnchley creation.
For all of chat, however, many of lhe biggest swccjls events deal with regular series. At the top of the lisl is the "s.iinfeld" finale, May 14; it's the
. '

I

0

'

kind-of tlting TV .ad ulcsmen'dream about.
·
Each year has
key, fourwwcck,pcriods when ratings are taken in every
TV market. Those help·sct ad rates; stalions insist that networlts try harder. .
So lhey do. They buy biuer movies, tty weirder specials, halch stunts
on regular series.
·
.
This time, those s.:ries set much·of-the attention. Consider:
. • The final ''Murphy Brown," May IS' on CBS. Diane English, who crc·
atcd lhc'show a decade qo, wrole the finale. "(There's) an optimism that ·
Murplty's life will go on (lndl that everybody sort of l!Cts what they want,"
said producer Man: Flanaaan.
• Milestones. NBC has the IOOth " Homicide" on May 8; Fox has the 200111
_ - · ·
·
"Simpsons" at 8 p.m. this Sunday.
• ShoWs, especially NBC one•, that are always big. "ER" h3S foor new
episodes, starting Thundiy with the bombing of an abortion clinic; "3rd Rock
From the Sun" has a truly hilarious guesl spot from John Clccsc on April

three

28.

..

.

sweep~

'·

period
' .,.

~

• Weddings, ranging from the sidekicks on "JAG'' to the main character.~
on "The Nanny." F!",. Drescher promises the latler will include a classy
gown: "they're goin.!lto put it on display afrcr the shOw." Then there's Ross
on "Friend~,'· slill claiming he '.s going ·to many that British lady. _
• Some surprisingly big efforts by PBS: On the fir.;t night of sweeps, "Mys•
tery" starts a superb three-parter: on the fio;t Sunday, "Ma.•terpit~.-e Theatre"
has Helen Mirren in a tough two-parter. "Painted _Lady."
• The usual guest sum;. including CBS' inlere&lt;t in ctiuntoy star.;,
On Thursday, Pam Tillis plays lhe same character in "Promised Land'"
and "Diagnosis Murder." The ne•t Tuesday. Trisha Yearwood is in "JAG"
-glad to work with 6-foot-4 David James Elliott.
"I'm S-9," Yearwood said. "That maktll·it diffiCult. because !10 ... any~-~
pic in-Hollywood arc so short ... On this show. I felt normal."
Those regular episodes coold stir up bigger racings lhan any of the specials. ·.
·
·
•

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�Page C2 • Jlwdlae an....JJIIItbul

.sunday,April26,1998

Sunday,April26,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport
•. Galllp~lls, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

•

...' J ·i:

Bess Grace and Donald Davis

'

' I

--GRACE-DAVIs-~·!
I

Mr. and

MrJ~.

Odell Manley . ·

;

...

Mary Maraum and Mark Childress

Open .receptioo planned.by coup I~

Mr. ~nd Mrs. Vonley Stanley

Silver anniversary to be marked
Mr. and Mrs. Dayton Spencer

•

polden anniversary to be noted
! CHESTER - Dayton and Sarah
!itra D~rst Spencer ~iII observe their
wedding anniversary on May 3
at the Gavin Plant Recreation Cen·
(er. from 2 to 5 p.m. ·
; Mr. and Mrs. Spencer were martied on May I, 1948 by the late Rev.
Gus Graham of Athens at the home
ilf her parents, the late Rev. Budd
.nd Gertie Darst.
~Oth

They have a son and daughter-in·
law. Ronnie and Marilyn Spencer,
and a daughter and son-in-law, Nina
and AI Wassel, four grandchildren,
and three great-grandchildren.
Spencer retired from the American
. •
Electric Power Co.
The couple requests that gifts be
omitted.

PATRIOT - Vonley and . Hazel will be hosted by their children.
(Cadc) Stanley will celebrate their
Vonley is the son of Jemima ·
· 25th wedding anniversary with ·an Stanley of Patriot and the late Ver- .
open house. They were married al non Stanley. Hazel is the daughter of
tbe home of the late Emmitt and Ida Reba Cadc of Willow wood, Ohio.
Knipp. by the late Rev. Rome Knipp They arc the parents of Barbie
on May 5, 1973.
(Terry) Bolyard, Joe and Rufus
celebrate with an open Stanley of Patriot, and Adam StanThey
invition to all friends and relatives to Icy of Ft. Eustus Va. The Stanleys
attend an open house on May 2 also have four grandchi ldren,Aaron ,
from 3 to 7 p.m. at the Cadmus Ashley, Abbie and Lance. '
Community Center. The reception

MIDDLEPORT - Odell and
Betty Rathburri Manley of 160
' Beech St., Middlepor\, will ce lebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary on
May 2 .with an open reception from
2 to 4 p.m. at Overbrook Center in
Middleport. ·
The reception . hosted by Mr. and
Mrs . Manley 's children , will be held
in the Center's dining room .
. ·The couple was married on May
· 14, 1948 in Russell. Ky. He is retired

Dove awards··honor late singer with Artist of the ·Year
-4By JIM PATTERSON . _
Mullins, who wrote such church
LSociated Press Writer ·
standards as "Awesome God " and
: NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) - It "Si ng Your Praise to the Lord ," had
tas out of character for the late Rich left Nashville several years ago to
¥ullins to covet recognition, though teac~ music to children' on Indian
he had always wanted oRe ·of the reset •ations in the Sout~west.
Cospel Music Association's Dove
H" 'd, heen nominated for 12
!wards.
.
Dove Awards since 1983. Thirteen
: The 41-year-old songwriter who was the charm.
died in a September car crash was
Steven Curtis Chapman won five
liamed the Anist of the Year on awards during the ceremony broadcast live by The Nashville Network,
'fhursday night.
; " He wanted one of these veiy including best male vocalist and
very badly," his brother David said songwriter. The best female vocalist
as he accepted the trophy. " He was was Crystal Lewis. ~nd Group of the
disappointed on a couple of occa- · Year, went to Jars of CJay.
s;Jons when he was supposed to be a. . Only eight awards were presentshoo-in and didn't win."
ed on television to make room for 12
· Amy Grant, Michael W Smith performances spannjng aearly every
and Phil Koaggy took ·part in a musi- musical genre. There was the exu:
cal tribute to. Mullins, who stole the herant rap of God's Property. altershow a,t the Nashville Arena without native rock from Jars of Clay and
even being there .
new ballad " We Fall Down" from

Bob Carlisle of " Butterlly Kisses" the award for country recorded song
fame .
for "The Gift," a collaboration with
Whitney "Houston closc1 the Jim Brickman . Kirk Franklin &amp;
show with a rousing " I Go to the God 's Property won best urban
Rock,' ' which -won the awarJ for tra- album and single awards for ."God's
ditional gospel recorded so-~ . After Property from Kirk Franklin's 'Nu ·
accepting the awa_rd, Houston Nation" and 'Stomp," respectively.
hugged " I Go to the Rock " songThe night belonged to sentimental favorite Mullins. Said Grant:
writer Dottie Rambo.
"Dottie, thank you for writing · " Rich Mullins was the uneasy conthe song," Houston said.
science of Christian music."
Houston boycotted the·Grammys • · The GMA was founded in 1964
this .year'because her soundtrack to to promote gospel music. More than
"The Preachers Wife " mov ie was 6,000 GMA members nominate and
nominated in the R&amp;B- category select winne,.,..
instead of gospel.
.
Grant and ~ushand Gary Charman each won a Dove. Her " Behind
the Eyes" won for pop-contemporary alhum and Chapman 'got bCst
country album for " Hymn' from the
Ryman:·
Country sinj!cr Collin Raye won

.

'

Have you ever wondered who
your ancestors were'!

What -were they doilll!· say.
around 1650''
.
And where they were ·! ·
" Genealogy via the Internet.''
(Ale under Books, S 12.95), hy
Ralph . Roberts, can help you find
that information.
·
" Preparing your family history is
now fa•t . fun and easily within the
abilities of everyone. No more the
keeping of jumbled noteboOk.• that
made genealogy just too complex
for most of us in the pa•t. ,. writes
Robcns. a former NASA engineer.
The book also recommends
genealogical programs. inc!udillg:
. -Roots V For Windows, which
has the ability to include histnric~l
events in rcpon.• and •iffers prnpcr
source documentation;
- Aocestnl Quest, a highly
raled genealogy snftwa": that is
ideal for storing family histury
information;
- the Family TrH ~ ;aker liy
Broderbund Software, w .;,.h is the
most popular .of the g~ncalngicai
programs that demonstrates how
computerized genealogy wurks.

Additionally. "Genealogy via the
Internet" offers resources avaliahle ·
through- onhnc servtccs; places to
find reference materials and nthcr
gutdes. a&lt; well as avaolahlc nn-hne
databases to &gt;Carch for other family
onformatton.
" This is like havinl' every major
library in. the world in your den." ·
Roben says. " It's as if your bedroom wa.• in !he Library of Congress
thousands of other sources
brim ing with easy-to-find family
record. were Jdst down the hall...
Elit.abeth A\'ins, a membership
m age~ at the National Gencalogical S&lt;JCiety in Arlington, Va., agrees
that the Internet has made ' tracing
oocs family history ca&lt;icr.
But _she also advise' that whilr
. " The Internet docs provide you with
infnrmation right ~~ your fingenips,
ynu also want tu he careful in con-

sidcring whether the information
you get is accurate and reliable
enough."
Robem. too, cautions against
using shortcuts while doing
research. " Good genealogy requires
the researcher to go heyond indexes
and undocumented lists. There arc
some shoncuts in genealogy. but
there arc rio shoncuts to proving that
you have discovered your anccstors," says Robens. who wa.&lt; sueccssful in tracing his family 's past
history via the Internet.
A resident of AlcKaoder. N.C ..
Roberts ha&lt; written more than 7o
books, including_"The Word Proccssor Buyer's Survival Manual,"
(.TAB ~ooks. 1984). "Compote''s
Computer Viruses" (Compute !ABC 1988) and "The Mr. PotatoHead CookbOOk" with Pat Roberts
(Elephant Boolis, 1998).

the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter. Mary
Marcum, to Mark Childress, son o(
Loretta and Ernie Roush of Bidwell.
A July wedding is planned.

;

. They have two suns and daugJi.:
tcrs-in-law. Boh and Nancy Manier
of Middleport·. and Steve and Dorc~
Manley of Summersville. N. C. ' live:
grandchildren. and lhree grcaj:.·
grandchildren.

Laurie Blankenship and VIctor Young

-BLANKENSHIP-YOUNGPOMEROY - Raben and Stella ·
Blankenship announce the engage;ment and upcoming marriage of
· :tl.eir daughter, Lauric L., ·to Victor
~. Young IV, son of Victor and
~athcrine Young.
: · The groom-elect. is a graduate of
'
'

AGE $5 OR ·OLDER
LOOKING FOR A JOB

.

Equal Opportunity Employer
(100WAD)

LOOSEN ·
•

It's YOUR Li.brary
Your V · counts!

•

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let us show you ways to:·
· • Reduce your taxes
·
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• Keep ~e of mind

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any local branch, or call fOF an appuintment.

•'

· N08111WESTTERRITORY UFE .
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

"

MARKETING ONE SECURITIES, INC.
registered broker~ler, member NASD andSIPC. ·

"
"

r

located at PEOPlES BANK
3S2 ~ood Strttt .
C.allipo~, Ohio 45G31

7.40-446-0902 .

Dtar~n4 t.Ows.m

800-374-6t6o

Registered Re}Jrrse11tattve
Marla&gt;tir~g

I

One !Wnlrltles, Inc.

May 5, _1998
FOR the (.3mil) Levy.

•

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•

Read Your Local Newspaper!
.
'
and See What's Happening!.;

.

RACINE - Free skin testing
clinic by Connie Karschnik, R. N.
Tuberculosis nurse, at Racine Fire .
Station, Monday, 4:30 to 6:30p.m.
Area residents are encouraged to
take advantage of e\•ening clinics.
TUESDAY
POMEROY Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,
will meet Tuesday, at the Legion
hall . 2 p.m.
POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club, 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
home of Valerie Nottingham, Long
Bottom . Members to make baskets;
t~ke ~wn supplies.
·
RACINJ; - Racine Are a' Com-.
munity Organization meeting Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park.
New .members welcome.
·
THURSDAY
POMEROY - AA and AI- Anon,
7 p .m. Thursday at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Mulberry Ave .,
Pomeroy.

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TISFACTION
•

DON'T
FORGETI

APRIL 30, 1991

•

If you're like 1J1311Y inveilors, you're timJ of the IRS taking up to a lhinJ;. your financial~

.Stop by the Markrt"!g One Securities dc:sk at

.

'

deadline
filing
MIDblEPORI VILUGE
TAl

Lea us help you put more"of your interest earnings where they belong ... in yout:" wallet.

•

MONDAY
CHESTER - Chester Alumni
Association meeting Mon;;lay, 7:30
p.m. at Chester United . Methodist
Church.

..,~ ~'·u-·

Marlceting Oitc: Securilic:s, lnc. locatc:d at Peoples Jbnk has tax-advantap in\'c:Stmc:nts.that
may help you lower your taxes and are designed ~give you flexibility and peace of mind.

Vote

'•

r --

GRIP?

.

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non -profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
· be guaranteed to run a specilic number of days.

i

Community Action Agency
,,P.O. Box 272
. .
8010 North State Route 7
Cheshire, Ohio 45620-0271

The hride-to-be will • raduate
from River Valley Hi gh School and
Buckeye Hill s Career Center in
May. She is employed at Holzer
Senior &lt;:;arc Center.
The groom-to-be is a graduate of
River Valley High School.

'

Grace Methodist Church ·in Ga .llipoj
lis . The ceremony wilf be performed
at I p.m. with the gracious custom of
1
open church being observed.

Meigs Community Calendar

• Gannett News Service
beachfront supervisors and a cleanl . Summer . will never be longer up crew for 15 weeks instead of the
'
~nit is !n 1998. .
.
usual 14.
. .
..
RACINE
Southern Local
l . We wtll have, tn fact , as many
Many of the few drove-on ml'vte
~4ys as we will ever get between
theaters left open on Memorial Oay, School Board, Monday, 7:30p.m. at
~emorial Day and Labor Day.
as do amusement parks and french the high school.
i So. what do we do with our extra fry and saltwater taffy stands on
CHESTER - IKES, Monday, 7
summer aays?
heachfront boardwalks. And many
Read live more books on our of them close Labor Day. or the p.m . at the club house .
{avorite beach? Rock an extra 5,000 week after Labor Day.
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
On the Nonheast ocean beaches,
limes on the porch? Drive throug~
Club,
regular meeting, Monday, I
two more nationpl parks? Ta~e three on the Great Lakes and northern
hzen more catfish from~e river . lakes o-uch as Montana 's Flathead p.m. at the home of Dorothy
tnd eight morc'quans' of ueberries and Minnesota's Winnibigoshish, or WoOdard, Langsville.
from the woods? Pick II E~r,e bou- in the snow-fed rivers of the Sierra
POMEROY ...,. Meigs County
~uets of buncrOy weed? Go iOOne Nevada or the Cascades, the water's
Veterans
Sero,:ice Commission, 7:30
~ore county fair? Dig live more
still a bit' icy for swimming on May
p.!Q. Monday at the Veterans Service
bushels of clams? Eat 75 more ears 25 .
of sweet corn · and 20 more 'grilled - eut that doesn't mean people . Office, Mulberry Avenue. Pomeroy.
hot dogs and drink 40 more glasses won't be fishing the cold "'ater. or
of iced tea'! Break another ankle on walking the beaches and the riverRUTLAND ~· A special meeting
the ~ofthall field ''
banks, anticipating the oncoming of Rutland Village Council will be
Astronomically speaking, a~ the · waves of summer. Or the oncoming held at 6:30p.m. Mo11day to discuss
planet tills 'in nrbil more or less as it ·waves of to_urists.
.
perso'nnel. ·policy.- and miscellaneous
does every year, we get the same
"We have a hig reservoir here at matters.
numher of summer days " :e always Glendo which brings in lots of
get. The official summer starts, a&lt; lx\aters from Colorado.'' says Nancy
Curtis, a book publisher and owner
usual , June 21. arid ends Sept. 23.
But this year our vinual summer with her husband of " small cattle
--:- the time hetwecn Memorial Day ranch . Curtis lives in eastern
and Lahor Day - is as long as it can Wyorqing, not far from the North
hc. It hasn 't heciP this long since Platte River. which is dammed to
·~,/
- .
1987.
make Glendo R~servoir.
'
'
· Heres why: Memo{ial Day is
"Boaters and fishermen from
always the last Monday in May. This Colorado come up hecause the lakes
-,: . - ~
year. that final Monday fa)ls on the arc so crowded there. If there arc
~p
2~th, the earliest date it can possibly
more days. there will be more
,.. _
N . (The latest possible dat.c? May mon~y around the community, more
3 I.)'
·
•
· iourists ... "
: Labor Day. always the lirst Mon-.
She hesitates a moment before
day in September, is Sept. 7 this Saying, ;, • . who we sometimes like
year. the latest date it can possibly and sometimes get a little tired of.''
lho
for
hi: . (The carlies\ possible? Sept. 1.)
But all of this contemplation of
.
'
: That makes the 1998 virtual sum- idle summer time, she says, laugh"'."' the widest of possible spaces ing ironically, is a notion manufacIIICO~E
betwecn the bookend holidays.
lured by an increasingly urban and
: Counting the Memorial and suburban nation. It means little to
L~bor Day holidays themselves, people who work the land.
·'
Lllte fliers will be charged a
' th~t's 106 days, nearly_one-third of
"Ranchwisc, 1 guess it probably
$25.1111 pemolty.
the year. In the worst years, with doesn't make a lot of difference,"
Memorial Day on May 3 I and Labor she says.

Gallla-~elgs

THE TAX

Meigs High School, class of .1993 ,
and is employed with Local 80 as an
insulator helper. His fiance will
graduate from Meigs High School in
May and plans to attend Hoc~ing
College-in the fall .
Wedding plans incomplete.

$ummer 1998 is longer by 11·
pays; imag.ine.the possibilities

Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency may be able to assist·
yoci in the following ways:
·
·Employment: We'r11;- looking for drivers to perform delivery·
duties in Gallia County. Daytime work Qn a ~egular schedule,
Monday t~rough Friday, $5.1 5. per hour,. up to 20 hours per
week. We also have hon'drivlng jobs available.
Training: Short or long term training in fields such as
computers, nursing assistant, COL, and others at area schools.
Do Both: Work part-time, attend class part-time.
Sound interesting: Call 367·7342, 446-1afe, or 992-6629 to
.request a JTPA Preapplication.

coun May 21.
A mcsugc left for Ms. Simpson's
lawyer was 1101 n:tumcd.

•

VINTON - .Ida Marcum and Pat

Lawson of Vinton are announcing

It's time to take controL

O.J. 's daughter
involved in accient
4 BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
- O.J. Simpson's daughter Arne lie
was arrested- for invcstization of
drunken driving after she crashed
her convertible into an apartment
·
building early Friday.
Ms. Simpson, 29. was in stahle
cOndition with minor injuries, police
Sgt. Tony Lee said. Nobody ~lse was
injured.
She was alone when her black
Saab hit a sign and a concrete bus
bench, crashed thr011gh a llqwer gardc• and souck the two-story apanincnt building, leaving cracks in the
waH, SJ!. Bill Pritchanl said.
_
She ·wtiL.Oidcmd ~to_appear in

·

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1

WANT To

·Guide helps you
trace your family
via the Internet ·
.
.
By ALVIN PEABODY
Gannen Ne- Service

--'--M ARCUM-CHILDRESS-.

'·

will

'

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from Kaiser Aluminum wiih 2~
years service, and now pa.~tors the:
Pine Grove Holiness Church at Vi,j:.·
ton . Mrs. Manley has heen alwaY.~
hccn a homemaker.

GALLIPOLIS -. The children of
Bess Grace and Donald Davis
announce their engagemen t and
coming marriage May the 9th at

'

•

: Not
Notget
nearly
enough.
D(ly
on enough.
Sept. I, we.
a niggling
94.'
• So this year the calendrical coi!l"
ciaence gives us as many days of
ps,'ychic summer as we wiJJ · get until
th~ same thing happens in 2009.
'
• Imagine the possibilities.
· : Come May 25. school students
will begin imagining. For them, ani!
for the teachers trying to retain their
aticntion. Memorial Day marks the
beginning of the lidgety, gaze-outthe-window countdown to vacation. ·
.. "The parade tells me h's summer... says Elaine Van Patten, a
Bishop, Kearney High School freshm~n' in Rochester, N.Y. She marches
with the Kearney band on Memorial
• Day. " The nice w~athcr. seeing
everybOdy outside. it gets you thinkin~ about vacation. Even. thou~lt
you· rc St\lck in school after that,
~ummcr has really already started."
· "Stuck in school." Um10m ...
yc~. Teac:hers know about that feel in(.
.
Outdoor community pools and
muni&lt;ipal beaches at small ponds
and Jakes oPt:n in many nonhero
towns on Memorial Day.
~llen..Cassady, direc.tor_oLparlt.s
, for Monroe County, N.Y., says he' ll .
have to employ a staff of lifeguards,

fl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~fl

Ju.st ~o$' yc,u
Kipling Shoe Co's
Spring &amp; Summer St~ndal
Sale ·
lin•
lllllllanll

'111% ••

.......

flllllldal

Clo11!d Ea1ter
Sunday

KIPLING SHOE .CO.
Rt.2Bypau

. ~ne speaks lou de~ than a sati~fied customer.
This is especially trve in skilled 1\ursing care.
.
Technical and medical expertise may be difficult I? assess. But everyone knows
when they have been treated well. With dignity. With respect. Quality nursing
• and 'rehabilitative care does not merely meet expectations. It exceeds.them.
It does not m!?rely please. It satisfies.
The Arbors at Gallipolis is committed to customer satisfaction.
We exist t9 help people -to make their lives better. Fuller.
·And more satisfy!ng. For our patients. Our families.
Or anyone who steps inside our center. ·
You c~n see tha.t satisfaction.in the faces of .
. A R:B 0 R
the Arbors at Gallipolis. Take a closer look.'
ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
Then decide. We invite you to come
Skilled Nursing Center
see us. F~ce to fac-e.
170 Pin~crest Drive
Gallipolis, OH 45631

. (614) 446-71l2

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Page C4 • Jhnbv et-.-~

Pomeroy~ Middleport • GaiUpolis, OH • Pol.nt Pleasant, WV
Jlunbav~Ua.ett-JimtitW • Page CS
-~~~~~~======~~~~==~~~~==~==~~~~~~==~~

:sunday, ·Aprll26,1998

Sunday, Aprll26, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport •Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Pork loin gets dressed
up with . raspberry sauce

Engagemen'ts

edd.
, Jng·.• .&gt;.

f "{'IT:
yy .

.

By The As ociated Press
Boneless pork loin roast is a
hearty staple.!\. teen-age cook. Anne
Bliss of McNeal, Ariz., is the creator ·
of thi s version dressed up with an
cntcrpnsin£ nourish.
The appeal of the .dish . Roast
Pmk with Ra&gt;pberry Sauce. is in its
nnagi nritive seasoni ng and rrcsentalion. It is not too hi gh in fat, calls for
com mory ingredients, and the proportions given here will make
enough for he aped plates and second
helpi ngs, aboul 10 se rvin gs.
·Roast Pork with Raspberry Sauce
I rolled bonc le-s pork lo1n .roast·
(about 3 to 4 round')

.;;.·».~--, ~.

··~.-"::'

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In\

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3/4 cup. Combine 1/2 cup raspberry
l1quid with sugar, vinegar, cloves,
ginger and nutmeg in a medium
saucepan.
·
Bring to a boil. Reduce heat; simmer, uncovered, 10 minutes.
Blend cornstarch and remaining
1/4 cup liquid ; add to saucepan .
Cook over medium heat, stirring
constantly. I minute or until thickencd. Stir in raspbtrries, lemon
juice, butter' and food coloring.
. Place roast on a platter; serve
with sauce.

By Max Tawney
Recently, I drove out old Route
588 and noted a lot of the changes
that have occurred since the time
when I was a boy. Back then it was '
all farms and we really lived in the
co untry. Today there is only one
farm still in business - the McKean
farm.
My dad owned 160 acres of land.
We raised corn, wheat , potatoes,
beef cattle hogs, chickens and had
12 - 15 dairy cows. We sold beef cattle, cream , eggs corn and wheat. We
.did nol go to the grocery store very
·often. We had biscuits for hrcakf'nst

I 1caspuon :-.a lt
I tca,poon grouo.&gt;d hiad pc·ppcr .

~-)

,.

I t en~poon ~roun d -:age ·
1.2-ouncc pad . age fwzcn rasphcrric,, 1 haw~d
I 1/:2' c ups ~ ugar
1/4 cup white vi neg ar
1 /4 1 ~: 1 :-i poon ground cl{wc:-.
1'/4 tc·aspoon ground gi11 gc r
1/4 tcasp&lt;,n n g: rounJ nutm eg

i:

·~t'&gt;

)1

1/4 cup L'llrnst &lt;nTh
Jennifer Barr and Jeremy Russell

--BARR-RUSSELl::-GA LLIPOLIS - Phillip Barr and
Kath leen Guiles announ ce the
upcomin g marriage of their dau ghICr. Jenni fe r _Carri Barr of Spokane.

Vicki Miles and Mike Chancey

-RA-CIN-E

w~ r.: hino t nn .

,~!n:=s~~i~~~~~~n~9::-ndo-h:-ou-ni-

.~-e nAtsahnv~lcappanronacoi.Jhnlcncg tmhearretnaggeagoc·,.

1

'parents · It's OK
,'Attentt'On
., .

Asbury Park (N.J.) Press
It 's a simple little word. only two
letters actually. It's also a word that
many parents have a hard time saying
~and meaning.
No.
•
"Parcnts would rather Ill' !heir chi Idrcn's friend than their parent," says
Rohcrt Butterworth, Ph.Q .. n Los
' Angeles-based psychologist. . "They
don 't want to he the bad guy. But I he
' pr\)hlem JS. !hey arc a parent. not
, friend . And part of being&gt; a parent ' r&lt; .· · 'J.~r.l ng no - strongly and convinL'ing: ly.
·
.
In, an c r~t ~ .in which two+parcnt
' worktn ~ lmmllcs arc the nonn. there's
t~torc .J.is~~-~ahlc im:omc and less free
1
1 tnnc. l&lt;.~ml~tcs. arc miles. ~\way . from
1 c~tcn.dctl famil ies. nnd 11 s cas1cr to
~ !_.!,lvc m than to pUI up the g:oncJ tight.
t ·: no" ha."i lnst its value in many fam ~~
1 he~ . ~K pcns ~:nntcnd .
!
" In many ,homes. th!! kids have lig-

·. urcd_ out !hat ' ~o· really n;~_an; ·not
; now or I don t thmk ~o. Buller! worth says. "And they've also learned
l that if they whine enough and nag

when Mom ·,,, Dad " 'Ys no, they mean
no - not nl.l . ~·;, no t later. not we'll
sec. " If snc "" no. mean 11 ..
Zcbrowski -'"l ' " D•&gt;n 't give in, do~ 't
give in. don't 1!-JVC in "
An~ don't nl'fer ion~ . detailed rcasons.
"As a r arent you're not required to
ex plain yow ·.1ction ,, .. Diamcnt ,ays.
'You don't nec·d to say you're sorry
lor ymu· acu on' ,JOd y0u don 't hfivc to
tcll 'your ch1l d vou love them when
yo u. turn' d011n ,; 1cquelt.
c~m offer nn ex pia.nation I{J r thc1r d~·r.: 1 ..,1p fl "Those
haggy pants ar ~ not approrriatc-drcss"
. . ._. ., there n l~11 j.., n&lt;i rc~:p,on to IJCt in10

While parcnh

pnnractcd discu:-...; Hm "i with t ilL~child .
" You' re in t: h .wg~: . not yuur~:hi ld ."

7..chrnw,ki 'ay~ .
In other ~on.k p:tn.! nb need 10
n;claiq1 their hvusllhold!- .'
rn lC ex.pc;'rt:-. :u.hn it thrH in r1 house hnld where " no.. isn 't u~ cd nftc.n or

used and n&lt;:t rt::dly.mcant.there c:ould
.
" It takes 1i mc, a lot of time." Diamcnt admih .. And tl1cre arc times
enough. they ' re going tO wear thclr . wh•.:rl u parent ito. going to want to givr
r~renls. d~wn ___ a~d !hat 'no' wi ll
in. But parent' need tn stand finn." .
1

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, hi!L:ornc '' ~cs:

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But wh1le It may he ca..'\tcr 1n the
shontcnn to say "yes." givi ng in will

• .t
1
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onl y cause more prohloms

la~cr

on.

;
" Parents ncctl to revisit the word
; ' ' no · immediately:· says Stanley

:

Zebrowski._Ph.D.. a licensed psychnl ogJst .. 'n ~nvatc prac!Je~ 1~ Frc'Chold.
N.J._ We rc 1~ danger ol ra•s•.ng a gcnerat1on of children who behcvc they
can do whatever they want. whenever
they wa~t." . .
Zcbro~sk1 pomL"i ~o parents who

allow their young children to watch
TV shows such as "South Park."
movi~s with inappropriate language
and sexuality, video games that center
on violence and cntcnainment events
such as wrestling an~ hockey. ir
which violent behavior is glorilicd. .
"Thescarcthekindsofthingsr ,.·ents need .Jo he saying no to· "
Zebrowski -says. "They're inapprop:J. ate for children. P,lain and simple ... .
And although parents may tfuly
believe !hose things arc inappropriate.
they still have a hard tinTC saying nn.
" Parents· feel uncomfortable se tting limits." say~ David M. Diamcnt.
Ph.D .. a licensed psychologist with
• CPC Behavioral Health Care in ·
' E&lt;ltonlown. N.J. "They don '1 want to
~ iCC Johnny cry ~r have Mary get mad
: •it them. But parents have a right. an.
1t bligation. to make decisions on what
and is not appropriate ror their chil~ •~rcn. ,.
. ; ~· According to the experts. setting
': ~mits - whelher it's tbe TV shows
: ; 01cy watch, the clotbes they wear. the
: •friends they associate with --'- is a fun; ! ~amental joh of parenting.
, : "Children need limits to survi ve in
;•Ole world," Butterwonh says. "They
: ; Oeed to know that they will not get
' ~ everything they want, they cannot do
: :!v~rything 'they want,. Life isn't fair,
, r~ it's a lesson children need to learn
''ll&gt;arlyon."
,r,
.
1
}
Children also need to learn thai

!

:1,.

•••

USA TODAY
WASHINGTON
Letitia
B ld · · ~
..
h w
a ngewas
s &lt;Jrst
vtsll 10 I c hitc
House
m 1932. when her father
was a congressman from Nebraska.
President and Mrs. Hoove r we re
entertai nin g congre&gt;Sional families.
Baldrige. just a gi rl. had seen pho-

a {'I d

' "enc' ouraged
.- to say
'no' t0 k"d
·
.
I S

he r()ugh gomg mitially.

. ~~nJ \.h~1t may mean ~o mc han.l

kchngs hc:h\o cen pmcnl and child at
the lx·ginnin g.
.. Ptlrcnts should ~xpcct to hear ·1
don ' t like y0u.' ·1 hate you.' ' You
Uun 't love me· and variari.ons on the

theme.'' Bullcrwonh "'Y'- "Parents
neeJ to under&gt;land that d"cirl1ne and
:-.ta n~ard s arc the tools n c~.:c~sary 1o
make ou r ch ildren pmduni1e momhe''' nf soc iety. Children don't turn
nul had hcca u&gt;e they heard the " "' d
' no' grow1ng up . I r.fon't dunk lhc

&gt;&lt;Jmc can he saJd for c: hildren who
didn 't hear it nflen Cll lliJeh ..
-

to Jeremy Adam Rus-

Letitia Baldridge adds colorful
recollections to Jackie's Whl'te
H0 uS e Iegacy
·
an d Iegen d.

vcrs,it y/ •n, 19f96.. She is . a
tcac 1er cone 1 o JUnJor h1 gh g~rl s
vn ll ey hall and basketba ll in th~ Fed cral Hocki ng School Districr.
.
Cha n ce~ graduated from M e i~ s
111 1986. rccel; cd IllS hachc l;&gt;r\ ·
degree from Oh10 State Uni versity
in 1991. and is enrcdlcd in the mastcr's program at Oh 1o Uni1•ers1 ty. He
is a teac her and head football coach
in the Meigs Local Sc hool District.

thei r daughter, Vicki Miles of
,Athens. to Mike Chancey, son of
:Charles and Mal)' Chancey, Racine.
, The open church wedding will
~ake place on June 27 a! 2:30p.m. at
'•he
, Middleport Church of Chn'sl. A
)'eccpt ion will be held immediately
•following the wedding at Royal Oak
iRcsort.
, . The hridc-elect graduated from

sell . son of Mr. and Mrs. T'"" Ru,.
'ell of Gallipolis. The wedd.ne wli I
take place at the Gallipoli ' Ch~ist i;\n
Church on Augusr I .

I

tos of the first lady. Lou Henry
Hoover, in ,a Gi rl Scout uni form (she
waslhchonoraryheadoftheScouls),
so she was eager to sec the .most
famous Girl Scout in the land in person.

Much

to

her disappointment. Mrs.

even think down .·· she ~ay... . "'We
don 't even dress on Fridays .~nym nrc .
w~·rc

not cnlcrtaining the wav we
used to."
•
·
The closest Baldrige will come to
dishing is to say that Jf'K had a
healthy Irish tcmrer an d a short
attention span when · it: cnme to, co ncerts, thm Lyndon Johnson had had
taste in tic s and that Jacki e's ~oft
voice did indeed come and l! O as
nc~dcd .
" .
As for Jackie ha vi n2: a rfair:-..

Baldrige just huffs.
•
"She did not. Thi s is so ridi cu-

with her hus.hand. She would. not
have done that ...
Then did Jack have at'fairs'!
" If he was as nasty as they say these affairs and mob. tics ___. non e nl

She tell s the story on hcr~clf over
lunch 'in Georgetown. hut shu shares • us would have ~\o·oriCed for him ."
little cbe about anyone 10 the rarefied
Then tell us stmlethim.! that we

Washington circle&lt; she hos traveled
over the yeurs. Perlmr&lt; that's why for
decade.-. nnw ~ he ha..; retained her Iitie

don ' t already know ahQut Jack1c. we
~sk .
·· ·n,~u

hook. ''In the Kenned y Style: Ma~i ­
cal Eve nin gs in the Kennedy White
House .. ( Duuhlcday. $29.95 1. ·
The honk. is filled wi ll• Baldrige's
recollections of the K e n~edy s
hi£ _t!Csl S&lt;"K: Ial events - the o~tdonr
dinn er at Moun! Vernon. lhe Pahlo
Casals gala. the Andre Malrcaux dinncr and the evening h&gt;r the Nobel
Pr.i;e wi nners. Recipes hy White
House chef Rene Verdon arc included.
So what was it like. rea\ly'' We.
mean. really.
" It was a time that was absolutely
hcautiful ," she say~. adding that
that's one of the reasons she did the
hook now. She thinks it's needed
more than ever. (The unceasing interest in all things Jackie· mighl be

Rings
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l\10SES
AUTOMOTIVE

52 US Rt. 60 East

._

Mason County Fairgrounds
(6 Miles North of Point Pleasant, .WV Just Off St Rt. 62)

Thursday, May 14 through Sunday, May 11, 1998

OVERBROOK
CENTER
992-8472

May is Mental Health Month

P~oples · National•••

In ·time· of need ...

•

A Vacation Club is a ·christmas Club•
that pays Qut In April·- a great way
to save for vacations, taxes".or
.· home Improvements!
·

C-R ISIS LINE

Vacation Clubs are available in plans or
$5, $10. and $20 a week. You make
49 payments an~ the last one Is on usl. ,

I

..

CllmUIIIIMI.:.emn

I

A Dlvlolon Of~ nllllonat'lluk

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• Pl Pleasant

Woodland Centers, Inc.

674-1000
~·

l'lem'*I'DIC

There r. a on~ent penlltr for~ wtlhdnwi.t or n-

compldlon of club. Mnlt ~ent due the wedl of April :ao
Mpll Instillment paid It moturlty.
· ·
, '

.

TOMMY HILFIGER

l

Qpen.Your 1999
.Vacation Club At

882-21.55

·liS businessman, OCCasionally COD•
tributes columns for publication
to the Sunday Times Sentinel.

TAWNEY STUDIO

I

77.5·5514

Max Tawney, a longtime Gallipo..

KNOXVILLE. Tenn. (AP)- Actor Louis Gossett Jr. and former Gov. Lamar
Alexander helped more than a dozen family members and friends of Alex
Haley unveil a 13-foot statue of the author Friday
Haley, who died in 1992, won a Pulitzer Prize for "RooiS," which traced
his ancestry and was later made inio the mnsl-watchqd miniserie~ in TV hisan audience of teachers, television
By HOLLIS L; ENGLEY
tory. Gossett won an Emmy in 1977 for his portrayal of the slave Fiddler.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Baldwin
cameras
and
White
House
YIPs,
.
· Gannett Newa Service
. Hundreds watched the unveiling of the statue. which was placed in a park
•
Hillary Rodham Clinton, three poets from Johnson and Kramer m November. The 13-foot-high. 4.200-pound bronze figure is described as
U.S. poets laureate and some young Middle School dueled with words
America's largest statue of a black man.
African-American. poets brought the while ,judges in the audie~ce raised
scores on numbered cards. .
; GATLINBU'RG, Ten~ . - Brenda and Emma Shirley of Leon, is the nation's history full circle Wednes"I'm the best there ever was,"
Let us copy your old family
L. Shirley and James E. Baldwin arc administrative assistant to Diana L. day, traveling in verse from its.
read
Tyrone Freeman, a Johnson
wilderness
beginnings
to
toda)&lt;'S
Johnson,
Mason
Courity
Prosec'
u
ting
. announcing thejr marriage on March
photos. Special 2-5x7's for
Washington , D.C .. neighborhood of ninth-grader who read his poem
Attorney.
17.
"Still Norma f."
.
$14.95. .Reg. $19.95. SAVE
They were wed at the Chapel of · Jim, the son of the late Brisco and Anacostia.
"I
am
so
musical,
that
when I
April
is
National
Poetry
Month
i Love in Gailinburg. TN during a Belle Baldwin of Gallipolis has been
$5.00. We also do passport
write songs, you sing them for the
,candlelight ceremony performed by in business since 1968 · with Jim and Wednesday evening the .President and First Lady hosted an rest of your life:·
photos, identification photos
Baldwin's Fine Guns of Gallipolis.
: Rev. Richard C. Skinner.
·
Antoine
Wade,
a
Kramer
scv.
evening
of
poetry
in
the
East
Room
The couple reside at Rt . 2, Leon
Brenda, the daughter of Robert
and photo finishing._
of the White House . Under crystal enth-grader, read his poem "Do You
chandeliers and television, lights, Have a Heart?" aboul "a man
former Library of Congress poets named Clyde, a homeless man who
424 SECOND AVE. , GALLIPOUS, ·oH.
laureate Rita Dove. and Robtirt Hass stays outside .... Maybe he gave up
and !he current office-holder, Robert when life was funny. Now he stands
Pinsky, read from three centuries of on the corner, asking for money."
'
· Nearby stood Kenny Carroll, a
American verse.
·
The poets - .an~ read~rs from 38-year-old African-American· poet
i Pensacola' News Joumal
being used to keep w~men from
the
audience, including both Clin- and writer who grew up in WashingNo matter what stand a church . becoming priests.
ton and is one· of the organizers of
takes on gay clergy, gay w.orshipcf'
"This, is a totally inappropriate tons - read from the works of
Octavio Paz, Emil) uickinson, Walt · the (our-school East of the Ri•er
and gay marriage, holy Scrip1ure way for Scripture to be used."
Inter-Scholastic Slam League.
inevitably is cited as the reason.
Spong approved the ordination of Whiiman, Countee Cullen, Langston
Writing poetry and reading it
Hughes,
Robert
Frost,
Sylvia
Plath
. The Bible says remarkably little an openly gay man, forcing the Episaloud,
he sa~s. opens the door of
-about homosexuality, yet what it copal Church nationwide to take and others:
Hass reached back to the 17th language.
'l!:'s ~a;' js S!rqngly worded.' ·
sides.
"We're using the slam as a ruse
ce
ntury
to read a poem of farewell to
''Th• ·relevant 'texts tend t&lt;l speak
In defense of hi s advocacy for ·
to
get
them to read and write r1lorc."
her
husband
by
a
nine-months
'preg•graphically abOut' actions, not about gay clergy, Spong says, " A faithful ,
he
says.
"A lot of these kids really
:persons or sexual orientations," says mont!gamous, committed lifestyle I nant' New England woman afraid
· the Rev. Marion L. Soards, one of relationship should not be an lmped- I she would die in childbirth. But do have problems with their articu·the country's leading biblical schol- imcnt of ordination. A homosexual , aftpr the reading. the young poets of lation. One thing -you make clear is
:ars and an ordained minister in the \11lo is living in a (committed) rcla- · Anacostia were still on Hass's mind. if y.ou'rc going to write something
A few hours he fore. Hass and his profound. you'll lose it if people
Presbyterian Church.
tion-,hip can be a wholesome examfriends rode with the first .lady in a can't understand what you're sayHowever. he noted, "there is. no pic for the flock of Christ." ,
motorcade
across the Anacostia mg.
1 • hihlical word for homosexual or
'J'h.!.Rcv. Donald Eastman of Los
River
to
the
J.
Hayden Johnson Mid- ·
homosexuality."
Angel es. a leader in the national
1
"Some of the passages that arc Metropolitan Community Church die School.
"We will not be undersold on this ldentleal
"To go fron) the East Room to
' regularly invoked in debates ahout fellowship. says he believes that
that school ... : · mused Hass as he
_ niereliandlse -· guaranteed~
I homosexuality prove upon cxamina- even where the Bihlc .« ems clc&lt;lr. slood
ncar
the
thrun~cd White
We Welcome VIsa, Mastercard·, Discover and
't tiun to have little or nothing to do there is room for douht.
House
huffct
of
lamh
chops
and
fat
with the suhjcct," says Soards. a
The negative statement hy Paul
American Expres~J Cards·
1
pink shrimp.
I professor of New Testament Studies (Romans I :24•27) mus1 he taken in
Johnson Middle School is in Anal at louisville Seminar~ and author of the co~text of Paul's larger argument cnstia.
the Washington. D.C .. neighthm all pcorle need the Go&gt;pel of
\ "Scripture and Homosexuality borhood
with the highest conccnira1 Bihlical · Authority and the Church Jesus Christ and that certain behavj Today"' (Westminster John Knox lor - homosex1,1al behavior - " is ti (m nl' public houJng. Across the
Press. $11 ).
an example of the ·uncleanness ·of street. working class African-American families live in two -stnry hrick
"For example . the wc.ll-known idolatrous Gentiles.' .. '
apartment
buildings. Broken glass
1 story in Genesis 19 about Sodom
Rabbi David E. Ostrich of Tcm300 Second Ave.
446-2477
Galli lis, OH
1 and Gom6rrah and the' lesser-known · pic Beth El in Pensacola. Fla., says a sparkles in the sand nf the sidewalks
.
t account in Judges 19 about Gibcah fundamentalist view of Scripture
But inside Johnson. the students
: arc concerned with gang-rilpc vio- . ..ill always find bihlical prohihi arc
following Ri.ta Dove 's advice. 1
' lcncc and llagrant disregard for the tions against acceptance of gay~ and
" Poetry needs to be on the lips.'' she
sacred obligation to proYidc hosri- lesbians.
says.
"When you hear it spoken. it
tality," he says.
· " However, more moderate or libgoes
directly'lo
the heart."
"lndccd. in the biblically formed . cral interpretations of the Script~rc
The White House delegation 1
mind. as we know it from subsc- can .lea~ interpreters to the conclu' quent hihli ~ al texts. Sod om and sion that · the prQhibitions arc not · came to Anaeostia to sec and hear a
poetry slam, a competition in verse
Gomorrah beG·amc symbols of God's · what God really intends.' ' he says.
·between teams of stlldcniS. Facing
judgment - not symbols of homosexuality:' '
•
On the 01hcr - hand, Soards
·emphasized that the New Testament.
in Paul's letter to the Romans. clearly reflects the condemnation of
WHERE TO TURN
.homosexual behavior that was
spelled out in leviticus i~ the Old
Testament.
, "As Paul discerned and declared
; dod's rchitions~il' to humans,
1homosexual acts were outside the
i boundaries of God's Intentions for
•
: humanity.··
Serving Gallia,
j So:uds says that ultimately. the
1 Bible is perfectly clear: "There is no
Jackson, &amp; Meigs
\ way t(l read the Bible as condoning
Communities for over
homosexual acts."
20 years.
Of course. there is disagreement.
I
.
, Bishor John S. Spong. the stan1-800-252-5554
: dard -hcarer "for the Episcopal
•
1 Church 's more liberal stands. has
If ·you have a problem
~ called on all denominations and
and need someone to
: faiths to affirm the rights of gay peo-' ·
call, we are here for ·you.
pic, and he denounces any who uses
; Scripture to defend a diffcrin~ view.
! Literal iiuetprctation of the Bihlc
: was never the intention of the origiSEIVIGI=
Ol ··
: nal authors. he sa~s.
• "The Bible has been used in my
......
Mllll'f
•
: lifc\ime to suppon the oppression of
•
:t..l.acks, women and gays. ·: says
Our diver~ highly
:Spong, a heterosexual family man .
•"People used Scripture to promote
trained staff are
:segregation. They used it to ke,~:p
dedicated to helping you .
•
;women from voting. holding office
• GALUA
~ MEIGS
• JACKSON/
;and going to 'universities. Today, the
30815 St. Rt. 1110, Galllpals
Mulberry ~II, Pomoooy
200 M11n St, '*·Bible is being used . to coqdemn
Is
an
e"'al
emPloYment
Opponunily,
Alftmwlivt
AcUan
~' and ta
llomos~xuals the same way_ It's
Gallil. JackiOn 14o;os. Boelll OIAicollol. Dlll\l AddleiOh IIICI 14M1ta1

f ()

333 Paga Street ·
Middleport, OH

•

• New
. Haven

pay the bill .

ALL·AMERICAN SUMMER GROUP
JUST ARRIVED .

·,.,..
I I,·

·Mason

be 94. I was very fortunate to have a
loving mother like her. When I saw
her buried beside my dad on· Mount
Hill it was the saddest day of my
life.
I cannot get ove r the changes that
have taken place on 1hc 'old Chillicot hc Road ( 588 as it is called
today) when there. were-farms all the
way to Rod ney. But I guess that is
what you call progress. I am gping
to take phmos on 58M all the· way to
~odney to Gallipolis .next week.
,
In in 2013 I will ·takc photos 'of
the same territory and if there isn't
70 more houses or businesses there
then I will have an ox roast on my
old home place for every person
thai is living on 588. They nrc all
invited for all they can cat and I will

Alex Haley statue unveil by Loui.s Gossett, Jr. .

:Read your Bible, make
your own interpretation

Placing a loved one in a
long-term care facility can be
an Emotional Detision. If you
want more information calf or
visit
'

Gallipolis, OH

by selling them to the grocery stores
that year. ·
I graduated form hi gh school I
had $800 in the bank. That was a lot
for a f;um hoy to have back then . I
changed my mind about my dad. I
gave him a big hug and 1old him
how'niuch I loved him and he almost
cried. Today parents cannot whip
their children. Bul I am ~ lad he laid
it on me when I did not mind him . I
am sure it made me a better person.
I had to get up every momingat
5 a.m. and do all the chores and had
to walk a mile to school. I remember
when we had a big · snow and my
took me to school on a horse and
everyone made it to school except
for two or three. They do not do that
.today.
To this day I wake up at 5 a.m .
read the morning papers. cat breakfast and I am up to the store at 7:30
a.m. !'will be 85 on my next birthday. I am so glad I ca me up the hard
way. I will say I had lhe hest dad in
the world.
. .Also the most wo nderful mother
that ~nyonc ~o uld have . She li ved to

-SHIRLEY-BALDWIN-

who are app·roved. Phone in
your credU applkution to nur
24 hour answering scrvkc:

SlJRJ£riTO I'Rt.K:tt.U•I ta iAk.\ N'l u

7:00 tlll'l? "Various Groups a. Sololata
6:30 till ?? *A.,chormen &amp; More
1:30 till?? *Conrad Cook&amp;: The·Catvary
. , Echoes Plua Many Othera ·
1:30 till 4:30_ "Kevin Spt1ncer Family
Knight Family _
Marvin a. Qeanna Clark Family
Divine Purpose a.
Builders Quartet

.The tenn "Managed Care" Ia ·
recognized by moat of Ul... · ·
even If we cannot define lt. Technically, managed care Ia
an arrangement under which a
provider agrees to sell apeci!J.
cally defined medical services
to one or more payers, iubject
to a strong medical review
system.
Practically, It means that
many medical.services, par·
ticularly rehabilitation' services,
will be contracted out to long·
term care facilities.
Fortunately, today,long·tenn
care facllltlei.are now lull·tlme
partnera In the modem health
care delivery system staffed by·
well-trained long-tenn care
medical proleaalonall.

TAWNEY JEWELERS

and cornbread for dinner and supper.
Every fall we butchered seven or
eight hogs and had plenty of meat all
winter, churned ·our own butter.
raised one acre of cain, which made
70 or 80 gallons of molasses every
year, plenty of apple butter and all
kinds of fruit. So you see we did not
l1ave to buy groceries.
I was as the 13th child in our
· family and my dad had to be strict
with all of us. When he told us to do
something we did it. My dad was
very religious and we all went to
church every ·Sunday rain or shine. I
did not: think I liked my dad until I
WOIS in high school. I thought he was
too strict.
He g~ve me a steer every year tcr,
take 10 the fair for a 4-H project. It
never won Ist place but I made good
money .when I sold my · steer to
Spears Butcher shop on Court
Street. for $200, which was good
money back in the 30's. He also
gave me hogs and. I made money.
Then he gave me an acre of land
and told me to sec what I could do
with potatoes: I banked almost $300

First Lady Hillary Clinton and
_poets laureate hear poetry at
.its roots at Washington reading

Bank Test Market Program .
We have $830,000 to l&lt;nd,
limited to the first SO people

B .e nd Area G·o _s:pel ]u._b.;lee

Sunday, May 17

Diamond

Adding VALUE
To ·Services

You May Pun:hast A Nl'w Or
Used Vehlclt Under A Special

Eighth Annual

Fnday, May 16
Saturday, May 16

add!llg water. d 1\CL"cs..; ary. to make

!'\he was ~o inh:: lligcnt. ..,o
as one of the nation \ lcadin!! author- c9ucutctl ... Baldri g·C ~ay~ . .. She cou ld
itie-s on ~.:liquetlc . G om.lm :u;ner~ and not h:1vc Linne what ~he diU in tho'c
gossi p do not mix .
ye:Jr&gt; at !he White House ,r she hoJShe docs not ki:\!'\ Jntl \~o: ritc. either. n't hc.cn . I ~.:an rcmemhcr "he anJ the
which will hC tl disappointmcm to presillent would read hoob anJ then
th ose nhscsscd wi1h Jackie Kennedy. ar£uC O\'Cr them . ll1cir Ji s~..: u ~sin n :-.
Baldrige \~(as Ken nedy's soc ial ' were ongoing. . Bmh of them wcr~
sc~ret;}ry and Is qui with her newc ~t
hright nconle .··

~---------:~-~~-~----,;._ _ _;.._.!::~;~;;:;~;;:~,

T~ursday, May 14

Spri n'lc r~&gt;ast with sa lt: peppor
and sage. Pla~c ro;l :-. t. on rack in shal low ro:t sllllg pan. B:lk·c· at .125 F for
I 1/2 to 2 lwur&gt; or until meat thermometer tcg c·otcrs 160 F.
Dra in ra ..;phc n:;~ ...;: rc ... crvc liquid.

" We 're in such a down period . We

Hoover ap peared wearing something
other than her green uni form. So dis- , low;." she snvs . " She was in love

appoint ed was Baldri ge that she
walked right up and asked the first
lady where her Scout dress was.
Baldrige's mother was mort ified.

I tahk spot)n lem on juio..'C
I lahlc!-.poon ~ ullc r or margarine .
n1 cltcd
·
~ 10 4 drop ~ red foOd coloring
Preheat -oven to 325 F

Max'·s boyhood days on the farm

len:

•
•

..

(304) 675-7222

�.
.
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis,.OH • Point·Pleasant, WV

Page C6 • Jludllg 11-..JI 'bie.l

Sunday, Aprll26, 1998

~:Sunday, April 26, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

•

History comes alive in Gallipolis· .with Federal Homecoming

\Mail carrier's life filled with adventure ·in rural Gallia County
By:
Jamea
Sanda

"Sing a song .of possuln post',
wagon full of mail. four, and tweflty
pacKages lied. on the horse's tail.
When they all were opened, the
folks began to sing, I'll report him to
the P.O.D. for the things he didn't
bring. The farmer's in his parlor
counting up his . gain, Ihe carrier's
plodding onward through the mud
and rai~ . His wife was off a-visiting,
jllst to make her board, when long
came'lhe fanner' s wife, riding in her

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"Ford."

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The above lines were writlen by
Renaldo Swisher, a rural mail carrier. In a piece wriuen for 1he Gallipolis Bulletin newspaper in 1914,
Swisher gave Some of his experiences · as a mail .carrier in Oallia.
Counly.
·
He began by telling how he had
stayed up late one night making out

Tonya Sharp, oi Grove Port, works on a quilt for the Iron Hills Soldier's Aid Society.

his monthly postal repon.
He was so tired the nex1 morning
thai he didn't hear his alann go off a1 .
5;30 a.m.
He rushed outside in his bare feet
io feed his horse some foader and
bran.
He arrived late at the post office
to sor1 the mail and got so interested
in the new ".Roars and Sawbuck"
catalogue thai he fell funher behind.
"I lost thirty minutes explaining
to a lady how fast her letter would
travel, the day, hour. and minute it
would arrive at Jimmy's address in
Seattle, Wash., just when. he would
answer, the. day, the hour and minute
I would arrive at her box with his
lener, as she said she only wanted td
know when to meet me to hear from
.·Jim."
.
"I staned off again and · in my
hurry 10 gel up the mail from 1he
next box, I dropped a postal card and
just when I got out to pick it up, the
wind blew it up the road . I chased it
200 yards and finally pulled it out of
a mud hole.
While I was vainly 1rying to wipe
lhe mud off with my handkerchief, a
little boy came running by and said,
'Mister, I'll tell you how to dit it off.

just pit on it." ·
While Rinaldo was chasing the
card, his horse decided to wander in
the opposite direction by about ~
mile or so.
Swisher had to turn around and
head back and whose house was
next but the woman for whom· the
muddy postcard was addressed.
The woman threatened to report
Swisher to the postmaster.
After delivering to the houses in
that stretch, Swisher had about a
mile of straightway before the next
house.
He cracked his brand new whip
to put his horse in high speed, and
the whip broke.
The horse gave a quick jump forwind as did Swisher. He hastily sat
back down arid in doing so cau ~ht
hi ~ trousers on a tack in the dpor.
"It' tore oul .both the cas1em and
western · hemispheres wilh a main
trunk - line leading soUih. After that
I could still do very well while seated bul how in the Dickens was I to
get inlo the post office.
.He decided to buy a new pair of
pants. but in order to get into the

used as a lap robe.
Unfortunately the tail of the coat
was a lin)e shon to cover up his
ripped pants.
Swisher found that·if he walked
leaning back a quite bit, the coat
would hang jus1 about right. And so
with a sort of &lt;1iff upper lip. digni licd manner he gm his pants.
He arrived home after dark. The
blinded horse ran over a bicycle, a
wheelbarrow and scared a heifer
calf.
· While the horse fell down , the
scared calf ran over some sening
hens and broke most of the eggs.
The dog howled and out came his
wife barking, "Where ha ve you
been'"
' As Swisher sat down to write a
letter explaining 1he muddy post·
card. the chair he was sining in
broke. In his effort to grab lhc tahlc.
he knocked the ink well over.
After gulping down hi s dinner of
cold greens and fatback, he wem in
The Gallipolis post office was located in the K of P building ai
search of his new two dollar claw
Second
and Locust In the first two decades of the 20th century. In
hammer.
1914
Renaldo
Swisher, a rural Gallia mall carrier, gave a report of
His wile said their three year old
the rigors of1 his job.
had thrown the hammer that day at a
Swisher decided he had hctter go happy farm hoy dniAg the spring
general store he had to wear an old · jaybird and the hammer was some.
to
bed
and that nig ht he dreamed of plowing.
di scarded overcoat which he had where in the briar patch.
going · back in time to being jusl a

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Sunflay, April 26

•••

POINT PLEASANT: W.Va.Narcotics Anonymous Tri ·County
Group, 611 Viand 'St., 7:30p.m.

By Bob Hoeflich

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As a lady In second stage mourning, Rose Braham, of Rush, Ky.,
pauses from her Christian duty, of caring for the solidiers at the Civil
War encampment.
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RAINBOW tERAMitS
&amp;GIFT SHOP

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Pomeroy, OH

234 E. Main St.

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740-992-2289

·'Turkey in the Straw' was the dance tune of choice for children at the F~eral Homecoming.

STORE HOURS
M-W-F 9 a.m-7 p.m:
Tues.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Sat. 9ll.m.-5 p.m.
Sun. Closed

The · Federal Homecoming Reenactment will continue .until Sunday
afternoon at the Gallipoli.s City Park.
.

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CLASSES
M--F 9:30 to 12 noon
Til. &amp; Thur. 6:30 tO 9 p.m.
Group·Classes
by Appointment

Grand Opening Celebration .
'

May I- 2-3

DRAWINGS DAILY
SUNDAY, APRIL 3, 2 P.M;- S·P.M.
DRAWINGS HOURLY

Break ABalloon &amp; Receive ADisco-.nt Of

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10% To SO%

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Photographs by Catherine Br~ley

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Sarah Bird, the youngest re- enactor at the lender age of tWo,
enjoys the activities at the Gallipolis city park.
Sarah is the daughter of Lonnie and·Linda Bird.

Ancient Vatican
manuscripts
made available
USA TODAY
DENVER - Rare a""icm manu...:ri;~&lt; ti'Om the Vatican Uhra_ry arc
hc&lt;:oming available to scholan; all over
the w,.ld thmugh a joint prpje&lt;:t with
IBM described to hishops here I&lt;L&lt;l
week.
The amhitinus undcnaking will
cvcntUJIIIy.digitil.c the colle&lt;:tion of the
Vatican Library. foulll!cd in 1451. " It .
will take decades. •· said p&lt;lljcCt din.'ttor
Vincent Yannuzzi of-ffiM.
He said the library has been called
, "the· pope's Sl!crei library" ll&lt;.'tausc
: access js so rcsuiC1ed. It can accomn!&lt;~
• · dale only 2.000 ·schol:t5 a year. who
1
cravcl from all over the world to study
lhe
collection of 150.1m ancient JHanu1
: ~Tipts (including a Bible manuscripe
• • written in Constaritinoplc in A.D. 350)
! · and I.S million books. Thousands have
tiever been read or cataloged; some
• manusaipl• are handwritten on ante• 'lope skins.
·
•
lkf mM 1m been O:Yeq»ng sw.n
• ... idlling iow-iglt scannet:S and
: "diJilal Wlllcfmrts" ~ allow sc~~?i­
• m 10 view fragile documenl$ on hne
! while preventing damage to origi• nals and protecting copyrights.

•..

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·

FRENCH CITY MALL
·Crafts &amp; Antiques

lot of you are, I r~ally have a cup, of
tea for you.
.
There will be over .50 gospel
groups and soloists appearing at the
four-day eighth annual Bend Area
Gospel Jubilee to be held at the
Mason County Fairgrounds, six
~.. miles nonli. of Point Pleasant.
.
i Evelyn Roush of New Haven is
~ presiden.l of the jubilee group which
!1 plans the annual affair working with
1 a commitlee of si~ other people.
~ · The jubilee will get underway on
Thursday, May 14; !II 7 p.m.; activi!' ties on Friday, May 15, will bog1n at
• 6:30p.m.; Saturday, May 16, activi~ ties will sllln at ' 1&lt;~0 p.m.. and the
t~ final day's program, Sunday•. May
~ 17. will go from I:30 to 4:30p.m.
~
I can only name of few of the ~0
1 groups and soloi&amp;ls who will be tak: ing part. Among them 'arc the
l Anchormen. Conrad Cook and the
; Calvary Echoes. the Kevin·Spencer
' Family, the Knigh\ Family, the Mar:. vin and Deana Clark Family. Divine
! , Purpose, Builders Quanct. Chrisl ·
I• Unlimiled. Gospel Melody Boys and
· Esta. Enlightened by God Singers.
; The Grubhs, the Beaver Family, the
~ Kenny Bledsoe family .. Faithful
~· Journey. ihc Danny ·Hood Family
and
·
,,
Admission is free and there will .
t• .Pc concessions on the grounds 10
accommodate you . The jubilee will
·go on rain or shine and you arc
encouraged to take lawn chair~ with
you so you can be comfy. Caf!lping.
is avaihible al reasof1al)lc rates and
reservations arc not required. Love
offerings will be taken during the ·
juhilec .

i

t'

SECOND AVE.
614 4469020
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS (ACross from tl1e City Park)
·
()pen 7 Days A Week
10 to 6:00P.M. Mon.-Sat.; 12 to 5:00 Sundays

P 0 I . N· I

P L I A I

A N T .

· ·· ..Artist Series .

Sam Cowan of Middleport
weathered the recent tornado in
Nashville , Tenn., but was ptelly ..
.
scared by the expencnce.
.
Sam was talking on the phone to
his brother in Huntington, ·w. Va.,
when the tornado hit. The telephone
went dead and the aclion I;Jegan.
Sam opened all of the windows in .
his apanment and crawled under a
de$ 10 wait out the blast.
· . AfterI he tornado had passed Sam' ·
did a little surveying . It had missed
the apanmcnl complex but all of 1he
trees-and these were prcny good
size-hut one had hecn blown down
by the storm. Sam had his car
parked ncxl tu the nne which
remained standing . So he did make
nnt all right.
'Jncidenlally. Sam is living and
working in Nashville these days
'hoping to get I hat performing ·break
in ihe world of music . You 've seen
Sam in a number of Inca! musicals
over the years.
I take it your favorilc cnlcrtaincrs

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Elizabeth Chapel
Church to have quartet "Released"
singing, 6 p.m.

*** '

GALLIPOLIS - Youth services at
Canaan Bap1is1 Church, 6 p.m. with
Ralph Workman speaking.
•••
KANAUGA · Worship service at
Silver Memorial FWB Church ,
Rand Avenue, 7 p.m.. with Rev. Jack
Parsons preaching.
•••
PORTER - Clark Chapel Church
with Rev. Don Kaw preaching. 7
p.m.

Police seize , more
than SOQ bags in air- ·
port luggage theft

OFFICE HOURS
9:00A.M. TO 5:00 ·P.M.
'MONDAY~FRIDAY

;

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CALL 7 40-992-3632 FOR APPOINTMENT
WALK-INS WELCOME

Dr. Rahman

Dr. Chhabria
,.

Specializing in:·Aduli me~icine- Diabetes, High Blood Pressure, Cfuonic
Lung Disease, Cholesterol, Cardiac Problems, Health Physicals and
Preventative Medicine.

,\Uslc Ill~ 13'¥
Tl1e £Ettie L~ .
lrflbnl &amp; §wt~Jn:~
(Traditional Jigs, Reels &amp;Hornpipes)

·a

· • Saturday, April 25, 1998 - 7 p.m.
State Theab'e (Main Street)
• Tickets: $10/Person Or $7/S dents &amp; Seniors·
•

Income Based Sliding Fee Scale

• Tickets Can Be Obtained At The

State Theatre Or By Calling, (304) 675-3746
.,

• DAlLAS (AP) - A man was
chatgcd wilh stealing $1 million
worth of luggage from the baggage conveyors al Dallas-Fori
Worth Airport and selling lhc
bags and their contents at his flea
m01rke1 stand.
·
"As far as we know, this is the
largest such recovery of luggage
at any major airport, at least in
the U.S.. " Airport Police Chief
Tom Sltchan satd Thursday.
·
James Clarence Ringley, 46. of
Arlinglon, ,was · charged with
lhcfl. .
Police said he stole more than
.500 pieces of luggage simply by
fllucking them from baggage conveyers..
_
The luggage was seized from
Ringley 's home, a storage shed
and his flea market stall. ExJ!Cn' sivc golf clubs and electronic
~ items were also found .

·-

Will be appearing at

...

The First Baptist Church of Racine
Sunday, April 26th ~7 pm

•••

I

- Board Certlfled Obstetrician &amp; Gynecologist -

•••

-omee.;
l'leaunt Valley Hoap!tal
Hecllcal omc:e Bullcl!"9
Suite 214
- 2S20 Val!ey Drive
!"oln~ !'leaunt. .WV 25550

Revi val at Debbie Dri ve Chapel,
April 19 - 25. Evangelist Clovis
Vanover preachin g. 7 p.m. nightly,
except for Sunday ni ght service, •
whi·ch begins at 6 p.m. Special
singing.

•••

. - Appu.: "WJ~nts •
(304)

.. Eyangelist Bill Neece .will speak
at l;irst Church of God, April 26 29, 6 p.m. on Sunday, 7 p.m. for
other scrvi~cs. Special music. nightly
and nursery provided . . .

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67~0

:.

Office Hours -

Monday • Fltday
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

***

Aceeptin1 New Patients

..

rnn Pleasant Valley

· Revi val at Qkey Chapel Church
in Lccta. April 27 - May 4. Rev. Jack
Rank!n preaching nightly at 7 p.m. .

. ILII Hospital

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Bailey Chapel
Church services. 7 p.m. with Jnc
Gwinn po:caching .

...

lliDWELL - P_oplar Ridge Baptist Church services with Lucian •
Nelson prcac)ling·, 6 p.m.
Monday, April 27

••••

Narcotics
GALLIPOLIS Anonymous Miracles in Recovery. ·
St. Peter's Episcopal Church. 7:30
p.m. .

***

CHESHIRE · TOPS meeting at
Cheshire United Methodist Church,
8:30 - 9:45 w~igh · .in. 10 · II a.m.

Sentry 2 Color TV 32"
• 5· Jack AutlioMdeo Jack Panel
1
-:

.Tax ·Break:

.

...

Thesday, April 28

....

has ·two ways to take a·

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
.
.
MEDICAL CLINIC.

'!'fie JVeals.

•••

•••

MARKETING ONE SECURITIES

.. Spaces S(l/1 Av•llab#B

CENTERVILLE
Thurman ·
Grange 1416 meeting at Grange
Hall , 7:30p.m.

the Racine Area Communily OrgaGALLIPOLIS - Hcanlinc inter- .
GALLIPOLIS - Choose To
nization 's Oower festival parade. ·
Another s19ry deals with the active suppon group, to meet, 2 p.m. Loo~e Diel Group, 9 a.m., Grace
many Ooods of Pomeroy and the at Holzer Medical Center, French United Methudisl Church.
continuing spirit of the town in 500 Room , Speaker Howard
VINTON - American Legion
regrouping following these inci- G~eel)e , M.D ..
.Post 1.61 regular meeting, 7:30p.m. •,
dents. It's an,ntcresting story which
GALLIPOLIS - Loaves and Fishfeatures a photo of Annie. Chapman
.
***
.
·
ENO
Eno
Grange
2080'
meet.
es.
free
meal
al
St.
Peier's
Episcopal
at her. bulk food store and the
ing. 7:30p.m , Polluck dinner to fol·
Church, noon. Everyone welcome.
Pomeroy levee. .
low.
!•hope ~ou gel an opportunity to
. ***
ADDISON · Addison Freewill
look over the magazine. It's well
Baptist
Church, preaching' service,
Revival
done and cenainiy presents some
favorable aspects of Meigs County_ 7:30 p.m. with Rick Barcus.

were rewarded at lhc Country Music
Awards Ceremony. Country music
This week I became familiar with has come a long way since that ''you
"Southeast Ohio. Magazine", a pu~ get a line and I'll get ·a pole" numJication by the 'E. W. Scrjpps School . ber. •Do keep smiling.
of Journalism, Ohio University. The
magazine is published three' times a
year and the cost of a subscription i.s ·
S10 for two years,
.
C:nhy Lentes is pictured on. the ' .
'cov.:r of the current edition and I
again within the publication which
also presents one of Calhy 's poems
is an article dealing with Southeast
Ohi~;~ as a place of inspiration.
l11e current edition also docs a
nice tribute to the greenhouses of
Meigs County, particularly dealing .
~ith the flowers raised in them. The ·
story includes a phot•• .,r. noat from .

~

Ansted W. Va's

VINTON- Witness II will sing at
Fellowship Cliapel. .10:30 a.m.

-

If you're into gospel music-and a

meeting ..Call Janet Thomas al 367 •
'o274 for information.

Tax-Deferred Annuities .

• SoundRite 1MVolume limiter

• ZDG High Contrast Picture

• ICON Menu Pa&lt;kage

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Tax-Free Municipa1 ·
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For more infonnation- caU
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Dianna I,awso~, lnvesunent Specialist at

Dianna Lawson,
Investment Speitaltst

740-992-2133
{ocatedat
Pco~les

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COurt &amp; Second Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

$479''

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ll jl' Cl'ldlt'Tarm•

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

(614) 992(2635
TOLL FREE 800Q.6581

~~~;,~F::.~:oo FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRt INC.
lllln ~: Due

we may run Oul of"" -rli!Od spOc:iol
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when

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our sato.. It-this thould hlppen to y0tw

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o .

Page C8 • .......,.-.....

Sunday, Aprll26, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport.• Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

•

Lilith Fair putS Sarah Mclachlan at center stage

..,.,

By JEFF SPEVAK
Rochester Democrat and
Chronicle
It's bci!n a yt.:ar s1m.: c Sar:1h McLachlan was transl'l1nncd from Canadian

cult chanteuse into the Lilith Fairy.
but a few things remain unchanged
m her life.
For instance. she and her husband. Ashwin Sood (whose ni ght job

· is drummer for Mcbchlan). still
·live in a little bungalow 10 Vancou-

ver. Bntish Col umbia.
But crcatin" Lilith Fair,' the most
talked-about ;nd successful of last
~um mcr' s concert tours, has madC
McLachlan the focus' of some unex pected attention.
··[ wns S ~(lvel ing snow a couple
of months ago." says McLachlan.
"and a couple of people pulled up
()Utsidc the house and started videotapin.i!. I thou~ht. 'Oh. they're taking
pictures of the snow.' and then I realized: ·No. they'.re videotaping mel "'
She did~'t fall on her butt while
shoveling. so the tape hasn 't
appeared on "Canada's Funniest
Home Videos. "
(Can you imagine the stimulatin g dinner parties t:10se video. spies
must be throwing. as they gather
around the VCR after de ssert to
1 icw their collectiun of tapes of pop

.

"We' re working on the next
Lilith Fair daily," she says. "Every
day is updated with a ~ew grid, with
all of the possibilities of perfonners.
.It's fun to move things around."
Like a gardener. McLachlan
waters and prunes her Lilith Fair
plan, and if somethinj! doesn't blossom, she mov.es it to 3nother place,
So far. Erykah Badu, Paula Cole,
Shawn Colvin, Sheryl Crow, the
Indigo Girls, Lusci-.us Jackson and
Bjork arc tentatively boOked.
But McLachlan's prize biOQms.
she says. are Nenah Cherry, Sinead
O'Connor, Natali.!' Merchant, Bonnie Raitt and Missy Elliot. Elliot
made a big impression on McLachlan when the two performed in the
same show at the end of last yclr:
"I' ve never see n anything like
it," says McLachlan. "She blew the
roof off the place." .
·
That's what some critics . said
about last ycar:S Lilith Fair: that the
tour. »-ith its feel-good vibe springing from mtrospective songwriting.
was in need of a raucous roof.. rais~
ing .
sing~ rs g&lt;)ing about mundane daily
" La zy journalism." re sponds
task&gt;! )
Mclachlan ·s snow shovel is not a McLachlan. "The people who said
part of her current solo tour. She that probably only looked at the
call ed recently before a concert date main stage. But we had a second and
in Richmond . Va.. delightedly a third stage with lots of interesting
reporting a temperature. of 80 performers as well . I think there was
degrees. (No one ~olives in snowy . a lot of musical diversity. But people
regions of the world ever seems to were so amazed and baffled by the
complain abo ut El Nino or the tour's success that they were looking
Greenhouse Effect at this time of for the problems. At the ·press conferences. every question was always
year.)
based
on a negative.''
Her critically acclaimed albums - .
At
one
point last year. that negamost not ably 1994's ··Fumbling
tivity
began
working on McLachlan.
Towards Ecstasy" and last year's
"S urfacing " - arc packed with and wavered on the concept of
emotionally wrought songs that can another all-woman Lilith Fair. She
be matched by few of her Lilith Fair suggested that the next tour would
companions. And she si ngs these include such acts as Ron Sexsmith,
often harrowing tunes with a sweet, Willie Nelson and Daniel Lanoisc
vibrant. breathy case that's almost because "if they have a sensibility
unmatched by any of her pop con- toward humanity, they, have a 'sensibility toward women."
temporaries.
"That was me airing my insecuriBut "I'm synonymous with Lilith'
Fair," she says. " It hasn 't been a ties at the press conferences." says
problem yet. I' m really proud of it. McLachlan, '.'Then one day Emmy
And that 's fine for me. because I Lou Harris took me aside and said,
never really want to talk about my ' Look, this may not·be my place to
say this, but why do you want to
music anyway."
change
anything' It's perfect the
OK. so let's talk Lilith Fair for a
W Lh' it is ....
while, then we ' ll sneak in the back
So the only males on the 1998
door and talk about that songwriting
Lilith
Fair tour, which begins June
· that McLachlan doesn't like to di sI
'
·
will
be sidemen in ban~s fronted
cuss.

Linda_McCartney knew how
to pu~ everyone at ease
By SUSAN WHITALL
room was fighting to get at her·hus-·
The Detroit News
band.
Paul McCartney paid eloquent
" How's the cook of.the house '' "
trihutc Tuesday to Linda. his wife of - she was teased about the titl e of a
19 years. who died Friday of cancer recent Wings song ~.:c l cbraling her
·
at age 56. vowing she " was. and still skill.
i&gt; . the love of my life ...
''I'm fine," she said. laughing.
But who was thi~ woman from The ncxtlhing she said was a saucy,
whom Paul McCartney neve r want- unprintable line about a hot dog.
ed to spend a night apan ·! Aside
Humor isn' t something that
from hcing the smiling hlond comes across in pholos. hut Linda
woman on the front •of all those McCartney had a dry wn. sci f-dcpfrozen vcggic dinners'!
rccating.
·
· Back in '69 she managed to pin
She looked like so meone's
down one of the world's most covet- attractive hippie chick sister. And
ed bachelors, without half trying . yes. she knew she sang off-key.
It's a coup few women over 35 have
It didn't . take long for Linda to
forgiven . If he 'd been nabhed by decide that we were amusing. I
~orne fl ashy model - hut Linda''
rcmcmhcr co nlidi ng .. r'm a little
In last year's McCartney biogra- nervous" to this woman who happhy, "Many Miles From Home'' . pcncd to be married to the object of
(Henry Holt). the e&gt;-Beatic gave a my adoration.
.
-hint of what had drawn him to her.
She laughed. And said something .
McCartney had been caught up in th at so unded &lt;I lot like: "It's
several high-profile. high-mainte- allowed ...
nance romances.
Then he met Linda. The turning
point was during a walk. when he
apologized for hcing tired. not his
usual .entertaining self.
· " It's allowed." Linda said l"ith a
laugh. It set McCartney free . He was
able to drop that endlessly grinning
and muggi ng Beatie Paul act. Linda
treated him like a man. not a Beatie.
. I should have understoosJ this :
Linda McCartney once had set me at
case. too.

It was in 1976. when McCanncy
and Wings played the Olympia Stad.um in Detroit. I was a junior
·&lt;taffer at Creem maga~inc , allowed
into the show hut. no backstage pass.
nu chance to meet my favorite BeatIe.
• Lcsler Bangs. our senior writer.
; ~liS backst~gc interviewing McCartney. I had to he there. I managed to
talk my way into the c•-Beatle's
dressing room.
There I laid eyes on Paul .
breathed his air. But when I shook
·his hand. the sight of those familiar
brown eyes struck me dumb.
"You're from Crcem'! Who here'
isn't
from Crccm maeazine'!" Paul
'
jok.cd, !living a perfect turn as BeatIe Paul. I made some zombie-like
reply and moved on.
I came upon a slight. smiling
linda. chaning gamely with anyone
who came along. She spoiled my
deer-in-the-headlight~ look, and
shook my hand. "What's your
name? Oh, you work with Lester?
Great!" she said. I was able to
unglue my jaw and talk; here was a
human beins. ·
She seemed glad to see us, and
we were happy to bask in her friendliness while everybody else in the
~

1 01

•

.

SPRING VALLEY CINE~A
446·4524

. ' ' ' .... ,

7

lAMMI MlTIIHI SAT I SUN llM
OOI..DEN U:tcm CMOS All SHOWISliO

by women and burly guys moving tal things that everyone goes
amplifiers.
through."
",
McLachlan 's ·insecurities go • That can be dangerous territory
beyond the self-doubts raised by the for confessional songwriters.
cross-country march of her Lilith Fans who funively aim video camFair Frankenstein. The dark songs of eras while McLachlan's shoveling
"Fumbling Towards Ecstasy" and snow probably are harmless enough.
"Surfacing" are true pictures of But there's a small percentage of
McLachlan's often troubled state of fans who feel compelled to get closmind during the time she was writ- er. " Possession," a song from
ing those.albums.
"Fumbling Toward' Ecstasy," is
· "Surfacjng" is a haunting album, ba&gt;.;d on a true story df McLachlan
staning with the ' sublimely exotic being stalked. In a bizarre twist, the
opening song, "Building a Mys- man sued her for copyright infringetery." In it, she laments a relation- . ment because of t,he lyrics. then he
ship crippled by a superficial panner killed himself.
"choosing so carefully" who 's
"Yes, 'one person took it a little
"holding it in." She's haunted by fanher, " she says. "And it was good
someone who has simply walked · to talk ·about it. I've never had any
away in "I Love You." And "I don't problems since, I' II you you that.
know how to let you go;· she coos
" Anybody who has their picturo
mournfully in " Do What You Have in the paper, or whatever, people
to DO."
will attach themselves to i.t and want
"I had no idea who I was,'' a piece of it. They' re unable to sepaMcLachlan says, talking about the rate fan.tasy and reality." .
period of her life in which she wrote
She conlcsses io experiencing a
those songs. " It feels great to be i.n a similar struggle in sorting out her
identity, a struggle exacerbated by
different place mentally now."
But she's elusive ab!lut where she the scramble to feed a two-headed
was at that time.
monster: her solo career and Lilith
"I'll bricny kind of say where Fair. There were times when it was
·
things come from ." she says. " But I ~ting her alive.
love for people to interpret them-.
selv'cs wherever the songs come
from . .
'·For me, music is abouttuterpretation. People come up to me all of
the time and sa~. 'Is this song 'about
this''' · Songs can have different
,takes. Someone asked me if "Full of
Grace" was about a friend who committed suicide. And it cenainly is
about a low place in your life. When
I wrote it, I was ccnainly in a very
dark place. My professional life was
taking over and my Jl!'rsonallife was
crumbling.
THE BPRROWERS'"
"People always ask n\e, 'How do
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
you get into my head?' Well, I'm
writing about emotions, fundamen-

.

·
1

By JENNIFER RICHTER
"At Central Supply we pride ournmei-Sentlnel Steff
selves in doing business the old
GALLIPOLIS - Back in 1948 fashioned way - giving our cusCentral Supply Co., 17 Court Street, tomers the service they have received
opened its doors 10 the Gallipolis and deserve for 50 years," said Dol·
P!Jblic and now SO years later, the tie.
business is still serving the area.
NO! much has chang~ in the st~re
Central Supply originally opened except the usual expansions due to an
in March, 1948, by panners Marcus increase in business and more supMassie, Alva Myers, Curtis Myers plies being· made to the public. hi
and John I. Richards. )he company 1965 the back room area was -added
staned by selling hardware, paint and and the store's back became two sto!
fann supplies.
ries. By the 70s, anodter addition was
By August 1948, Curtis MYers added to.the back room. '
sold his ·interest. in the business lo
Bernice, Donie and Neil explained
Mit.ssie's son-in-law, Evereu McMa- some ofth~ unique services the store
hon. Also in 1948, the company hired has offered l?r currently does offer. ·
Bernice McMahoa as its first fullBernice remembered when the
time bookkeeper.
.
store . would close early one day a
BUCKEYE RURAL ELECTRIC JOINS TOUCHStONE ENER·
Mrs. McMahon recalled that week so that her husband could go
GY AU.IANCE ·On AprilS, Buckeye joln,ct the raniCa of coopbefore 1948, she and het husband ; out to people's homes ·to clean I
eratlve electric utllltlea acroaa the county ae I Touchatone
were fanning, but they wanted to do 1 ·air/heat units that had been pur- i
· Energy partner, "a nationwide biand and market effort that
something else. Bernice said the ·chased at their store. This hands-on'
ldentlfiel cooperative utlllliH PfOI!kllng IUperlor cullomer HI'
chance cal)le to go into business so · iworking attracted many people 10 .
vice while maintaining a alrong local preiiiJ'ICe," according to
they took it noc knowing how sue- shop at the store.
•
..
Jim Weaver, Buckeye'• executive vice prealdent and general
•
1
d
h
1
·
ld
1
cess.u an ow ong 11 wou ast.
Bernice also recall.ed the days
. manager. Above, Ml a Grear, left , placea a fl nlahlng touch on 1
"W dec'ded
·
1
1i
h
E
11 k
of B ke • 1r ka
e
we were gomg 10 wh.en they were the only store in the '
new ouc llone ngery I c er on one
uc ye;a uc::,_/ m8ke this our life,'' said bernice area to carry ~nges and other types ,·
with line aupervlsor Dean Martin looking on.
k'
·
·~·
~
· too mg back to 1948. "We hoped it of industrial items.• s~ added that I
would last this long."
through the years, the company has '
In 1950, Myers died and the com- Slrived but survived and it will conpany's remaining panners purchased tinue 10 survive in the future.
RECAU.S PAST 50 YEARS· Bernice McMahon, left, remlniiCII
his stock. Thea, in 1955', Richards
She also remembered back to
about the opening of the Central Supply Co. In 1946 with her
retired, leaving both Massie and when her children were growing up
daughter, Dottle McMahon Cheetnut The two disci!.. the dlf·
McMahon in charge of the business. and said that she was not surprised
terence In the bookkeeping from 11148' to the current day tach·
nlque.a.
·
·
·
As limes were changing so. was her children got involved .with the
. GALLIPOLIS - According to the . Although this requirement is not
Debt Collection Improvement Act of mandatory until January I, l999, this the company's merchandise which business.
Neil explained that many repeat
Although larger stores continue to
1996, all Federal payments made may be something that will hold up began to include washers, dryers,
your
January
advance
payinenl.
refrigerators
along
wlth
the
original
customers
that
have
been
coming
to
.
come
into the.atea, Dottie thi'nks posafter January I, 1999, must be made
Anyone
who
did
not
receive
a
stock
of
paint,
hardware
and
plumbthe
store
for
several
years
come
itive
of
the ·future of the company.
by Electronic Funds Transfer (Direct
"I
think
there will be a future,"
direct
deposit
fonn
in
the
mail
aod
ing
supplies.
•
back
mainly
because
of
the
personDeposit). This will include all paywould
·like
to
complete
this
form
for
Marcus
Massie
decided
10
retire
in
alization
offered
by
the
store's
.
said
Dottie.'
"I think you need' to
ments made by' USDA through the
'FSA. administered programs. Direct future payments contact the Gallia- 1960 so Evereu and Bernice made · employees. Neil said when customerS chaoge and adapt. You still need to
de119sit forms will be mulled to all Lawrence•county office at 446- 8686 . their son Neil, who had been work- come in many do not know exactly provide a service that·the customers
pioduce,; thai are.currently receiving or l-888•2ll-lll26 (toll fri:e) for .ing tliere since 1957, and theirdaugh- whanhey want but he eliminates the are accustomed to."
ter Donie McMahon Chestnut, pan- wandering around looking for items
"We' II have to change our mix of
'payments by a check. We would like additionat infonnation.
Jim Herrell is the counly exec:· . ners in the cornpany.. By 1961, all had and tries to supply his customers with inventory a little,'' said Dottie. ''You
to encourage everyone 10 complete
utlve
direc:lor or the Gallla· an equal share in the company and his knowledge. This in tum elimi- have to find your niche and accomthese forms as soon as they receive
Lawrence
Farm Service.Agency.
Donie became bookkeeper.
nates the purchase of many .UMeed- modate to it. We hope we have a lot
them and return to our office.
Whal had !Jeen a pannership· ed items.
·
of loyal customers. lime will tell. It
became a corporation in 1984 when
''We give more friendly service:• is more or less a national thing, big
both Everett and Bernice officially said ~eil. "You don't have to come business is buying up linle business.
relileli from. the business.
in and pick up a dozen things when I~ is just the way things go."
"When m)' husband wanted to you can get by with one or two."
"We'll survive because. of the serretire, I bought him out so that we
Neil added thai the store offers vice we give,'' said Neil. "We've
'
•
could 1!11 Jle equal partners," said service that is like no Olher.
enjoyed servitjg the general public:
BY:
PA1TY DYER,
5d.
.
N~~r
let
li
veshtock!w~
in
'
!
!e
Bernice
.
.
..:....~
•
·
'
Now
the
company
carries
kitchen
We have made a lot of 4ood friends
.DI.trlct..Con...-vetlonlat
nur
tramp
e
I e edges.·
In
1992,
Everett
passed
away.
I'
d
f
pon
.
.
supp
tes,
see
s,
arm
equipment,
in
the ')'Cars: We try to give the best
. GALLIPOLiS - USDA Natural
6. Do_not.P.Iant aquauc. vegetation ·s1·nce ht"s .~-.~. Bemt'ce has nol been
·
1
·
""""'
pamt, too s, phones, bird feeders, friendly and kind service.''
Resource Conservation Service
f any ktnd m the pond; II m~y Iead active in the
business, but still mainRIGHT SELECTION · _ ~I
"We
have
had
a lot of good
Despite !he cold and rainy weath-- oto ·~.unbalanced
fish populatton and . tat'ns. ao t"nteres't and o"'ers ·adv'tce plaots, small machinery and much,
McMahon Mlecta thli rig~
'"
much more. The store still does have pmployees to help build the business
er this is un 'excellent time to check
or
· of paint for a cullomer
a
senous
weed
~ontrol
problem.
'
.
when
needed,
explained
Dottie..
the
originals
that
made
it
into
what
it
into
what
it
Is
today,"
said
Dottie.
"It
the condition of your pond. How is it
before mbdng. Nell ..ld lhet
7· If a senous weed probl~m
. Neil still acts as manager while · is today including hand ware, electric is a good place to be."
,holding up to the recent rains? Are
thll
le one Item thet the comllcvelops,
c~nsult
OS~
Extenston
Dottie
maintains
the
books.
Although
and
plumbing
supplies.
.
Central Supply Company is open ·
the spillways functioning properly? Is
·pany haa· conllnuecl to carry
~nd_
bulleun~
or
agncull_ural
and
both
h
ave
~ildreo,they
are
doubtful
"What
we
cairy
is
much
more
from 7:30 a.m. 10 5 p.m. Monday
· there brush or trees growing on the
throughout all the 50 YI!Bfl
wtldhfe
agencies.
·
.
that
their
children
will
continue
on
diverse,"
said
Dottie
of
the
store's
through Friday and 7:30 a.m. to I
dam that need removed?
that the bualneaa hal been In ·
8.
Adequ~1e
! vegetauon cover with the business after they retire.
content.
.
p.m. on Saturday.
Are there appropriate safety should be Jllatntamed on the
operation.
devices near the pond and clearly viswatershed to prevent turbid, silty •
ible?
The 10 commandments of fish
pond maoagemenl are:
periods following heavy rains, use
L Do nO! put fish of any kind into gypsuin or hydrated lime to clear it
sp,ayerCalibratioo", which provides Note specifications as to water pH, imately Mother's Day along the Ohio
I By HAL KillEEN
the pond except those you get from
up. Follow
POMEROYFarmers,
have
you
a step by step description of spray rig type of malerial thj: spray tank should River and a week later in areal! away
the hatchery.
.
Ohio Pond Management bulletin checked the calibration of your spray calibralioo ~~J~d needed calibration be composed of, and the amount of from 'he river.
2. Do n01 fish for baSs until they 'for recommendations.
equipment? Misapplication of spray fonnula.~. are available from the time tank mixes may be stored in
have had .a chl\ftce to spawn. Under
10. Proper fertilization may be a material rna~ be minimized if cenain· ·extension office.
If you have gardening questions.
spray tank before ·spraying. Make
· normal conditions, they will spawn
good management lool if intensive prec:autioos are followed in yearly
join
me this afternoon at Karen's
Inconsistencies
in
spray
applica·sure
that
you
have
properly
identified
the second summer after they have
pond
management
and
production
is
Greenhouse
from I:30 to 4 p.m.
check
ups.
H.
Erda!
Ozkan,
Ohio
tion
may
be
due
to
several
reasons.
been stocke4.
·
the pest so that the appropriate chemdesired.
It is not a recommended State University Professor of Agri~ Check t/IC spray nozzles. If old and ical ha~ been selected. Remember where I will be answering your ques3. Fish the blutgills hand. Take out
practice for this area due to the nat- cultural Engineering, suggests the ·worn out, buy new nozzles. Check for that some chemicals need constant tions atlhe gazebo. On the half hour.
at least a dozen bluegills fOf each
ural
fertility of our soils· and ·the following procedures in his fact sheet nozzles whiCh. are clogged up with agitation to keep them in ,solution.
I will be presenting a five minute talk
bass.
.
accompanying
weed
problems
which
on
"Preparing Your Perennial Bed" .
"Boom
Sprayer
Calibration".
old
spray
ntaterial.
4. Don't throw any bluegills back.
Plan
on attend.ing this free extension
Fill the sprayer tank with plain
Clean out nozzles and ~pray tanks
Weekend gardeners. its ti.me to
Even the little ones.
usually result. from added fenility.
water. Run the sprayer, !nspecl it for using recommended cleaning agents. complete your spring lawn and tree outreach program. Karen's Green· leaks, and make sure all hoses and Recommended cleaning materials plantings. The cooler spring weather house is located at54886 State Route
seals functioo com;:ctly. Calculate the ·cao be obtained from the extension allows for an extended root system to 124, Portland, Ohio.
How rate of spray using your tntelor office, ask for "Cleaning Field .develop so the plant can survive the
speed and nozzle type at a given pres- Sprayers to Avoid Crop Injury", a hot, dry summer months. Our peren- . Hal Kneen is tht Meigs County
sure. Application rates can then be . Missouri UniveiNity Guide. Check nial and rose gardens should be in the Agricultural &amp; Natural Resoun:es
changed based on tractor speed, the alignment of the nozzles.
ground and growing. It is too early Extension Agent, The Ohio State
pump ·pressure and changing nozzle
Follow .chemicl!l label recom- for most of our annual plants. wait Universily.
type. .Copies of Edzal's "Boom mendations for mixing chemicals. until after the frost free date, approx-

Direct deposit will be
mandatory Jan. 1, 1999

The 10 commandments
of fish pond management
1

.

"

'

Our cellular phonea arelolde!l with
hH featuree "StraH out ol the box.•

wa~rifmuddywaterpersistsforlong

~ BigScraen

County agent says blue mold early this season

~ Easy io use Menu Options
. ~ OutsltUQng Oigitll VOice Ouality

j

56K INTERNET.ACCESS
Step by ~r nec:w est ~lular 01)8 .location today for a · .

I

fr~ chan(e to win George Strai• tickets
'
. to the MDy 9th concert in Columbus. Be sure tO register at o local
Cellular Q;ll store bamon bela. e the Nay 1st drawing. Some Cellular One winners
may even receive VIP pas585 ~nd a cha~ to·meet George Strait in person!

~ 1~,.... ot oldor i•.~ ID

By JENNIFER L BYRNES
end of May if not sooner. Please
GALLII'OLIS.- It is disheartening remember how crucial it i~ thai we
10 report thai there are already con- not import the fungus sqoner than
firmed cases of blue mold in south mother nature brings it to us.
central Kentucky and .~m TenBecause there may be one more
nessee. Alth011gh there is also active frost, and because tobacco plants are
blue mold in Georgia and Florida, the · under cover in greenhouses or in outsource of infection has not been iden- . door noai systems, there is a tendentifted.
cy to feel some protection. COnsider
It ha~ been said many times before.· this a false sense of security. The hot
that using locally grown plants is an spots in Kentucky ·and Tennessee
absolute necessity.
wene sporulation heavily when they
WINS CoineSi
Las! rear Gallia County producers were found. The souree·plants have
Stapleton of the BAE Shoe
waa named win- . pulled together in a tremendous effort • since been destroyed, however, the
ner of 1 Vlbnlun clock during a '!Jitlwt
et the 1hoe elora
to keep blue mold out of the area as damaging tesults of those spores are
....,..uy. B a E Shoe service aponiOfld the contaet.
long as possible, and producers wm ·beginning to surface In other parts of
extnemeiy successful in.their effons. . Kentucky as there are more and
In 1997 blue mold was not identified . more repons of . blue rilo'ld from
in Gallia County or in Ohio until July . 'around the state. Whether the mold
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic training
at
10, and one conl{ibuting factor was 'originates in a greenhouse or outdoor
annQunces the ·addition 'or John H. Fairview
the conscientious usc of locally \float system, it could still end up.in
Kinney, MD, to the Clinic's medical General Hosgrown plan~ .. In light of the n!Cent your operation, as the air in a srccnstaff. Dr.. Kinney &gt;will provide full pital in Cleveblue mold discoveries, it is lilcely that \house is turned over so frequently
time coverage in Holzer Clinic's ·land. Dr. Kin. we will see t~ dise~SC here by the. and outdoor floats experience naturUrgent Care Centers in Gallipolis ney has exten'al vi:ntilalion as well. Producers will
sive experrand Jackson.
\naturally and rightfully jlrolecl their
A native of upper state New ence in·.emerpl~ts from frcezin11 temperatures,
York, Dr. Kinney received his bach- gency medi. GALLIPOLIS· KcndraL. Strick- 'Which will unfonunately protect 'the
elor degre.e from Sono"!~ State Col- cine, urgent
land. Oak Hill, a Modem Woodmen blue mold liS well.
· .
lege in Rochnert Parle, Calif. He care centers
of America district ~presentative,
Keep in mind that there II'C no
earited his · doctorate of medicine and
family
Dt'. KltiMY
completed a five-day _ed~cational ~hemictds labelcdorpendins th(ire
from the Faculty of Medicine in Lis- practice clinics. ,
program ~the fratemaHtfe tnsurance " 1designed .to rescue plants from blue
bon, Portugal. ~fter Medical-School,
Dr. Kinney and-his wife J)eborah ~iely's home'off'ICC n!Cent ih Rock imoJd and many other fungal diseases.
Dr. Kinney conducted hi~ Residency will reside in the Gallipolis area.
bl111d, Ill.
Do not wail for blue mold 10 appear
~ .
.

Urgent care physician ioins clinic

NOKIA •nd ConnKIIng P.a:ple •re ffacMmerkl ol
NOKIA C01por1Uon 1nd or ill 1ffill1l . ..

'

It's time· to check Iuour
spray eq·uipment
'

'

~ Lots ol Talk 'rme

·

Sundlly, April 2$, 1!MI8

Jl

Vlllt NOKIA COUNTRY In Slntllllnd / /
and YCIII·could win a George StraH '
,autogl'lphldgultar l ·hlt

•Reliable service
•Dedicated customer support
And Now •56K lnt•rnet Access

·..

D

50 years of .service in Ga.l tipolis·

•

Come see
our large
display or
~all tod_ayt

Section

Central Supply Co. celebrates

"Surfacing" is her biggest critical
and commercial success and
received an additional boost this
year when she won her first two
Grammys: Best Female Ppp Vocar
Performance for "Building a Mystery" and Best Instrumental (or
:'Last Dance." Add to that her
hands-on work with Lilith rair, and
McLachlan finds herself in an
'unending procession of 14-hour
days.
.·
" I was on the road fpr two years
·and, in retrospect. it was' way too
long," she says. "You start becoming what other people want you ro
be. I didn't . know any musicians
back then. but the best piece of
advice I've gotten from a number of
people si nce then is he ruthless for

.

Get the
Strait·,·D·eal .
on NOKIA

·Farm Business

-lho-

and no·purchase is nemsory. One on1ry por por1011.

'"'\""" need not be , . _ ..... limo ol drawing. •

,,

.

-

Attends seminar

before you spray. An emergency
labeUor Acrobat, the recommended
treatment, is still pending at thi1 time.
Dithane and Carbamate (Ferbam)
are eacb labeled for the greenhouse,
outdoor floats, an" the plant beds.
Plants should be oo a splay program
as soon as they reach dime size.
• Carbamate is a good choice for
first applications on very small
plants, because tobacco plaots will
tolerate it slighUy better at that size
than they will Dithane. As the plants
grow. alternate the two chemicals in
applications scheduled for every S-7
days. Continue treatments on into
• field production with' properly
labeled chemicals. and always follow
label directions with regand to application rates and n:-entry intervals.
Watch this weekly column for news
about an emergency·.label fot: Aerolial MZ.
·
· Growers have numerous sources
of blue mold information available to
them. Beginni.ng last week, tbere is a
blue mold update Monday-Friday
during the noon n:pon on %.7, as
· well as an update in the • Ag News"
portion of this article, weekly. In
addition, groWers can callltoll f~.
1·800-835-BLUE for a recorded
update; Also check with you local ag
supply dealer for updated informalion
. 4

from the Extension office. For growers with Internet access, the Nonh
Americ11n Blue Mold Forecas1 web
site
address
ts:
&lt;http\lwww.ces.n&lt;;su.edu/deptslpplbl
uemoldl&gt;. In the last two years, Gal· lia County growers have changed
their approach to this problem and
developed the kind of altitude impor· tant for controlling this disease. Keep
up the good work and keep working
· together.
For chemical ·applications rates
and more detailed information about
chemical and cultural blue mold control in the seedling stage and in field
set tobacco, please call the OSU
· E~rcnsion office at740-446-7007 and
request a free blue mold control
guide. In addition, Please REPORT
any suspected cases of blue mold to
the above number.
Jennifer L. Bymes Is G.llla
County's qent In apiculture •nd
llllllnll'tMW'Ctl.

Escalates.rebate war
• · DETROIT (AP) - Chrysler has
~SCJllated the rebate war, saying origmal owiiC!rs of a B1g Three vehicle
c~n save $500 or more on a new
Chrysler.
· Ford and General Motors
·ann.ounced similar programs

•

�.-.wtbiel

Page 02 • Jaam.1 aJt.....

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

!1;.30:::;=::;A=nn=o=un=ce=men=ts=~ao==-~Lo~st:=an::=:d=:F~ou~.n~d_.~-.....:..-:,Oi;kld:;me:lepon;;roy;,-_-,

~ Use caulk and grout to

Lo11: black Lal&gt;lt;how ml1, ,..Ia,
llintrovillt area, purplt collar.
frMKdy, "Zeus·, 740-992-3885.

·seal bathtub and tile joints
By READER~S DIGEST BOOKS

and resists cracking despite expan·
sion and contraction. Most varieties
l=or AP Special Faatures •
Caulk is used 10 seal 1he joim
are off-white 10 march standard tile
where your bathtub meets the ceram·
grout.
.
ic lile. Grout keeps water from work·
Pick out all the old caulk (or
· ing its way between tbe tiles.
grout) from the joint. Use a thin
· There's a lol of expansion and
screwdri ver that's slightly narrower
than the joint and a razor blade or a
~ontraclion along the bathtub joim.
and it's n01 ~asy to·keep it watertight. utility knife. Clean off all debris so
The problem is worse when the joint
that the new caulk will ~dhere prop·
!Is filled with the same grout used erly. Scrub with bat.hrOQm cleand:
i;nse lhoroughly wilh a sponge and
,between Iiies. Grour won't flex:
i instead it cracks and .admits water dry well with cloth.
If you are using a caulk gun. cut
! Into the drywall or plaster behind 1he.
' bathtubjojnt. .
, lhe spout of the caulk cartridge so that
t To repair a bathtub joinl, it's usu· it will produce a bead of caulk-large
, ally bestto use a IOQ percent silicone enough io fill the crack . Mount the
cartridge into 1he gun and squeeze the
adhesive caulk. which comes in tubes
1or cartridges and is available at any gun\ lrigger while moving lhe spout
1hardware store or home center.·Look foiward. This will force the caulk into
the cmck and form an eveh bead the
for ones called tub caulk. or tub and
tile sealer. It stays flexible for years length of the crack. (fusing a tube of

!

Public N!)tlca .

PUBLIC NOTICE
purpose of tWa public opportunity • to become
The Vlllogo of VInton will meeting Ia to Inform the acquainted with, end to
hold a community meeting .clllzeno regarding the _ comment on .euch ltema ••
to . Inform tho public propooed project end to economic end environ·
regordlng )he proposed give the public tho mental lmpactl, ..rvlco
a,ea, alternative• to the
·••nttery 11w1r ayatem. The

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
1
, , NOIIct Ia hereby given by
!lite Board of Tru-a, and
, ~acuthre l)lrector of the'
111outheaet Ohio Emergency
Medical Sorvlcaa District
r tltat uld Boarjl will receive
: ... led bids lor . the
· purch11e of Two 11198 Type
: Ill Claaa 1 Mlni·Mod
• ambulances. Bids are to 1M
' received
by the SEOEMS
.

i

.
...

• Public Notice
Dlltrlct Board not later than
12 Noon, Moy 01 , 1998 at
SEOEMS
Dlotrlct ·
Headquarta'ra, 3240 Stat'
Route ·160, ·Galli poll a, OH
45831. Bide will be opened
and read by tho Executive
Director on Monday, May 01,
1898 at 12:00 PM at
SEOEMS
Dlstrlcl
Headquartera. Gallipolis,
OH.

.

I•

I'

project, or a~y other toou11.
The meeting will be held at
the VInton Town Hell on 1
Monday, May 4·11 6:00 p.m. I
Aprll26, 1998

Public Notice

Public Nollca

Speclllcatlona lor theea
ambulance• are available at
SEOEMS
Dlatrlct
Headquartera, 3240 State
Route 160; Galllpolla, OH,
45831 . (740) 446-9840.
Blda
must
be
accompanied by a bid bond
or certified check totaling
5% of bid, payable to the
Southaaal Ohio Emergency

Medical Servlctl Dlttrlct,
Gelllpolls, OH. The outer
envelope
muat · be
conaplcuouely marked
"Sealed
Bid
lor
Ambulancls· Do Not Open
Until May 01, 1998"
Th• SEOEMS District
Board raaerves the right to
reject any or all bide,
.April 1&amp;, 28, 1998

'

I'

!~ 1 Discontinues
r.• 6 Avid

•.
:;
·•
. :•
1:

;:
:•
·~

::
1•

I•

11 Kind ol energy
18 Appoin,tments
21 To eam
22 Make points
23 Conscious
24 Winlrey of TV
25 Aam constellation
26 :rouchy: hyph. wd.
28 Part of AWOL
29 Sell-out sign: abbr.
30 Allhaltime

;~ ~ g::rten

34 Billy- Williams
35 Chickens
37 Bloodshot
38 Hayes or Aedcly
40 Schoof SYbj.
41 Sixth 5ense: abbr.
42 Shakespearean king
44 Ebbed
46 Repeal
49 Make changes in
52 Homed animal
53 Cooking vessel
55 Christian holiday
59 Build
. 60 Piece of sta!Yary
61 Word with hot and
license
64 Work hard
85 Shortage
68 Liver secretion ·
67Conceal
68 - in the bYd
70 Ajar
71 Ear: prefix
72 Snare
73 Belgrade native
74 Uerary category
76 Terminus
77 High-strung
79 Neighbor ol Fr.
60 Give off
82 Puts forth effort
64 Melodies
85 Recipe direction
86 Katherine or Diana
87 Seize

DOWN
1 Big hit
2 -Haute
..
3 Hunter conslellalion
4 Easy as .:...
5 Thoroughfares
(abbr.)
6 Old Testament book
7 Was painl•l "
8 Enter: 2 wds .
9 Eagle
19 Esteem
11 Took a cruise
12 Possess
13 Come down after
llighl
14 Regions
15 Make less
16 ~lockhead
17 Simian creature
18 Commerce
.19 Roof border
20 Ovine animals
27 Cabbage variety
30 Salver
33 Pleasanl
36 Smoolh and slippery
38 Warmth.
39 Neighbor ollndia
43 Newt
44 Fragrant flower
45 Speck
47 "The Eagle Landed"
48 Notway's capital
49 Large fruit
50 Speak eloquently
· 51 Tree trimmings
52 Big swallow
54 Doctrines
56 Make an aYdio
lra~scription

57 Happening
58 Splits
SO -Prejudice
61 - se (intrinsically)
62 Set free
63 WrongM act ·
66 Items for painters
67 Up-and-down
69 Sham
72 Flaming light

2

ALL Yard a.. Mutt

287

EXT. H54

I Uuat88
$2.99~rMin.
evrs.

N d
G d
ee I a oo

1

4411-t 959

s.irv-U 1619)&amp;&lt;5·8434

30 Announcements
Red Croai Ufeguard 1ra1ning dass
now form1ng. ftag lnning Sunday,
Mil)" 3rt! CfJ.1740-992-8073.

Auction
and Flea Market

90

1110 n..n. Sunday

· 10:00 a.m. saturday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

Wanted to Buy

Complete Household Or htatool

obligation : 1·800·328·8325 ext

Pluga. Switches, &amp; ElectJical W.U

Anv ·T~pe Of FurnitUre, Applitnc:·
ea. Antique's, Etc. A110 Appraisal

Corp, Box 460 Summer'avllle,

Oudett.; Hlndllng Buic Plumbing To : Tope Furniture, 151 Second
Prob'ems; And How To Do Varl· Awnue, Gmlipollt. OH 45031 .

. 73
74
75
78
79
·81
, 83

Penn or Connery
Main idea
Elevate
By wayol
Precious stones
Ad!litiooal
- OYI (get with
difficulty)
85 Thread spool
88 Make investigation
89 Inventor - Howe
92 Warble
93 Courtroom event
94 Embezzled
97 Operate
99 Guitar's smaller
·cousin
I 00 Respiratory organ .
103 In good order
105 Not real
106 Devotees
107 Examinations
109 Neighbor of lsr.
111 Projecting machine
part
112 Rhymer's creation
113 Play on words
115 Posilive
117 Spectacles
118 Cans
120- Tower (Paris)
122 Like the M~ky Way
123Yield
124 Eats a lillie of
125 Parties
126 In progress
127 Put away for later
129 - of the ball
131 Colton labtie
133 Giant god
134 Biller
135 Bright signs
137 Authentic '
qa Ill-mannered
140 Nothing bYI
143 Holy woman: abbr.
145 Poe lie preposition
146 So-so grade
147 Traveler's aid
148 _Psychofogteal self

Free to good home, German
Shepherd/ Avstalian ml~pups . ' all
mates, 740-667·13l2. •

All 'f'ard Sales Mutt Bt Ptld In

Wh1te female cal, liner ll'ained, to
good homo. 304-458·2218.

Sunday l Monday odltlon - A\101\111, GaUifloH•. )40-4415-2842. ·
1:00pm Friday.

Adv-ance. Dud lint: 1:oopm the
day before the ad ·ie to run,

CHANNEL
MARKER
CONDOS
North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6, fully furnished ,
near restaurant row.
Openings from May thru Sepl.
446-2206 Mon thru Fri
446·2734 Evenings &amp;
weekends

Any donations for Larry

Backhoe &amp;
Dozer Work
'

Have you or
someone you know
experienced the loss
of a child? If so and
you are interested in
· meeting with a group
of women that can
.feel your pain,
Please contact
Lisa CoughenourTackett or Tammy
Stevens at 446-4467
BOOTS .·
All Leather Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
.
. ·
Engineer ........................ $49.00
Wellington ......................$49.00
Loggers ................... ,.. ,,. $50· 55
Harness ...... ~.................. $59.00
Carolina-Georgia . H&amp;H
Insulated: Safely, Gortex
SWAIN FURNITURE

Ringa, ' Pre-1 Q30 U.S. CurrancJ,
Sterling. Etc. Acquisitions Jewelf:r
. M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

$43,857 Great Home Time. OJT

HEARTLINE
A health and interactive
support group

will

meet

2 "PM
Sunday, May

26

Holzer Medical Center
French

HUGE YARD SALE

Howard Greene, M.D.
· Topic: Heart Well ness
Through Your Eyes
Public is invited
Refreshments

FOR SALE BY
OWNER

l10

•

Homemade Noodles- Green
Beans· Slaw-Mashed
Potatoes· Roll· Dessert·Tea·
Lemonade- Coffee
Sunday May 3rd
Adult $.4.75 Student $3.50
11 :00·2:00 '
at Southern High School
Take out Available. ·

am sorry to announce
our UPS Service at
Office,

will

be

May

1,

1998. We . wish to thank

Phone 740-·388·0213

./

$200.00

16"-Pizza
at the Jumbo

Australian Shepherd Mix

446-3500

Call: 256-6456-Day
256-1530-Evening

Friday-Saturday-Sunday
Fri &amp; Sat 11 am til9 pm
Suh. 12 noon til 8
at The J\Jmbo

YARD • BAKE· SALE
Saturday: May 2M
8:00 am-4:00 pm
H~rrisonville Presbyterian
Church
Lend-A-Hand

.

'I

. May Unlimited
Tanning Special for ·

Everything must go

15% off Storewide
Pets Plus

May 4tlf·7th
* Free walkjng tours
(call for limes)
* Door-prizes . .
* Refreshments
1·800-765-6482

$3oat

Lissa's River View
480 St. At. 7 N.

446-4660
Now accepting appli.cations
Brookside Apts.
Washer &amp; dryer hook-up.
For more information call
446-9611 .

Gallipolis Area'Jaycees 1~~
Annual Golf Tournament
May 91h, 1998
4-Man Scramble Cliffisde
GolfCiub
Cost' Member· $45.00
·Non-Member ·$55.00
Shotgun Start @ ll:30 a.m.
Deadline to agister is Wednesday
May 6 @ 5:00 pm
Register at Cliffside Golf Club
446-GOLF Un!fted to first 80
people.
Golf, Cart,

LiFT
Mother's Day Gift as low as
.
$499
BOwman's Homeeare

. Andrews lawn MoWing
Service For All Your. Lawn

740·245-5797

'

•

DriY•s-OTR
GaHil\ ·Uetgs Community Action
HOllE IIOST
Agency May· Be Abla To Assi1t
WEEKENDS!
'lbv n The Following wa1s:
Good llilos. Friendly Freight
All Coi!Vemional Fleet
·Employment: We're Looki"g For
CDL·A &amp; 1Yr. 01R Roq.
Orivera To P.erform DeliY&amp;ry Du·
Call Ken 800-395-1045
fits tn Gattla County. Oayolmo
Everlngs (7:30 ·10:30) &amp;
Work, On A Raaular Schedule,
Weekenda&amp;00-893-8792

-..e Par

TFalnlng: Shor1 Or Long Term :=::--tPad&amp;a9'
Tratning In FitMdl Such AI Com- •401 K Relirament

putera, Nursing Anillant. COL .Safety Bonus
V.cf Ollor1 At Aroo School&amp;
"Sal8llto Communication

f&gt;o Boih: Work Par! · Time, AI· Minlmuml yr. Experfenc:e.
IOnd Class Paot·Timo.
Clau ACOL. Hazllo~

· HI WTnoctdng Co. Inc.

..

3

Sound lntereoong; Cali 740-387· Do ..... s.:..~ ~,.,~r
7342, 740·4-46·1018. Or 740·P02·1.~-""...:..-:_.:....:.:...:::..:."':..:;.-__
. ~8211 To Raqvoll A JTPA Preap.
E-ltlt'· fuH tinw lor tr111Hounty

private non-profit blood In
Athena. Ohio, B.S. or U.S. In
Community H-. ompltalia on
nu..n IIIUallty. l\-to lor ,..

Adlon Agency
P.O. Bo• 212
80tO Norm State Route 7

Cheshire, Ohio 45620.0272

ptoductlve f'lelllh i11ue1. Canduct cammunllr educatton

Equal Opporamity E""'""er

11\rough apoRing onQHOmantl,

, The Family of ROY L. DENNEY wish to
: expresa our great appreciation for the many
: acta. of klndnass, prayers, ·support, -food,
:flowers, cards and expressions of sympathy
: during the 1011 of our loved one.
: A special · thenka to . Paator Cllij Curry,
: Waugh-l:talley-Wood Funeral Home, Pall·
: bearers, Mike·Denney, arid music b.y Ronnie
:and Nancy Lemley.
God Bleil you all,
The Roy L Denney Family

.

'

We're having

, The family of GRETHEL E. PATRICK would ·
:like to thank lhoH who helped e... our .sorrow

an

OPEN HOUSE
today, Sunday April 261h
between 1 :QO pm and 4:00
at the Gallia. County 911
Communications C!!nter.
We're located on SA 160
Beside of the Senior.
citizens Center.

·In the death or our belovad mother. Your
•
•
.personal words of ancouragemant, prayers,
;visitations, the food, flowera and carda were
'greatly appreciated.
·
· A special thanks to Evenllellat Johnny Fox
~rrom Cookeville, TN for hla heartfelt message.
1We thank tha Gallipolis Chrlltlan ·Church and
;the Chapel Hill Church of Chrlat for all cering·
:support.
·
'· Thanke Jay Cremeens • Co. for 1 Job well
:done.
·
·
The. Faml

Card of Thanks

..

· '1Tie family of 'im~norr 'Rem woufd li~e to 1fian~
all of tfiost rvfio srnl food, cards, praye~s;, jlowers,
memorial donations and ~ind support duri!'9 tliis
lime ofour deep sorrow.
•
: Our specia./tfian~s to 'Rev. 'Ricfiard Vinson for
:/i;s prayers and comfort at tfit fiospital, to 'Rev
~obert 'Fttty .imd fiis. clmdoling words, tfiose of tfie
;'Emergency Squad, to tlit organist, William £loyd,
1fit 'Funeral 1Jireclors, 'Fred, Joan, and Sene
:wood and,ti! any otliers wfio were ffim to comfort
'us iq riie loss.ofour dear loVI'd ont.

'

'

,.

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page B-6 ·
. f

LOOKING FDA A JOB .

•

• Guarant~ ~urly' Wage
Verses CommsiKJn Pfowam
• Top RelaU Co"'"ia!liOn

Wilt\ Pricoa

• Haalfl tnaurance Available
·

· , •Paid Vacations
• Stock Purchesed Plan

• Manager Ia Eligible For
Monlli)''And Annual Bonuses

• SuppiK!s Furnished
• Merchandise Discounl

• AtiYancod Training
• Opportunity For Advance.,..nt
For More Information Call Bill
Rooker, 1·888·888-7778 Exr.

1873.
HVAC lnstallero Nea&lt;lod For Ex·
panding Company For lnttalla·
rlons Of Hearing &amp; Cooling E~:~uipmont In Manvlactvrod &amp; Reai·
denlial Housing
• 3Yr~ Experience Needed
f •·RSES certified
• P.aid t.tedicat Insurance

110

Help Wanted

es, hosttaatl, bar-tenders, &amp;II ·
c:ellent pa,., lle~~:ibte houra. S.nd
resume to: Twlsta,. Spon 1 Grill
107 Academy Drive Ripley, WV

25271 .

OTR Truck Driver Need&amp;d, COL,
•nd Hazma1 Required, Flat Bed
Experience Call 800·482~5236 or

(740)416 3358

Ownor()ptralon · Flatbed
Operate east ollhe Uluiuippi
Rivel wittl heavy concentration in
WV, OH, KY. ll. IN, and MI.
"Paid 70% ol grois" Company

lumishltd license plate 'Direct
depoaii"Sa!EMiite cornmunlca·
tiona avAilable •fuel purchase
plan 'Home most weekend&amp; •
Medical'insurance available.

The Country, Has "Openings In
Columbus, Ohio And AI Its Cor·
porate Headquar_ten In St.
Marya, Penn.s yl~anta . Ma~allurgi­
c~l, Production And Forgtng En·
''"~era Are Encouraged .To ?ut
i hetr Talenta To Use In A ~row­
"0 Company Where They Will Be
~ecognlze~ . '!Je Are Also. Look·
lnQ For Individuals Expect~mced
In T.he Set ·Up And OperatiOn Of
Equ.1 pment In Powered Metal Op-

•

Our Sincere rffianks .
• · rrfie. framily of 'f.merso~ 'Reese..

Part-time tJtperiented caretaker

tor my

alderl~

mother. Pleue

cell 30-4'·875-1272 tor more lnlor·

matlon.

180

Wanted To Do

Truck drivers needed to deliver
flowers in 24' Ryd« ttuck, COL &amp;
medical card requ ired, call 740·

247·2e84.

Two Cooks Wanred For Bo~
Scouts Summer Camp Room &amp;
Board A~allable . Please S&amp;nd
Reaume To: 733 7th Avenue,
Huntington, WV 25701, Or Call

Local 740-245·5949, 0• 304·523·
3408.
Wamed· part time bartender and
k1tthen help for pr~vate club. send

WILDLIFE JOBS TO S21 .ao /HR.
Inc. Benefits. Game Wardens,
Securi~. Maintenace, Pack Rang·
ers. No Elp. Needed. For A.pp.

Kingslze waterbed w/headboard,
Kingsize waterbed w/out head ·
board, mattress, heater, liner In·
eluded. Xl4·675-7154 altar 4pm.

180 ' Wanted To DO
ANY ODD-JOBS

To Work Wilh The Bell People In 30.4-67S.7ttl
Th&amp; Industry. Please Forward A
ANY ODD JOBS
Resume Or lener Of Interest To:
KEYSTONE
POWDERED Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, mulch·
METAL COMPANY, Human Ra· ing, floWer be(ls, landscaping,

A.M. ·2:00P.M . &amp; 10:00 P.M. ·

6;00 A.M . PleaS&amp; Apply At Scenic
Hills Nursing Center, Monday •

~riday Frum 8:30A.M. ·4:30 ~M .

SHAWNEE IIENTAL
HEALTH ce:NTER,INC.
Scioto Counl)' Clinic

ADULT CASE IIANAGER _ At·
quires A Bachelor Degre&amp; A!'ld

Ofiio LSW Or LPC. lluot Have
Knowledge Of Community Support
Sy&amp;tem Component•: E•1ensive
Knowledge And Backarou nd In

sidewalk . edging,
mowing ,
etc ... Free Estimates . Call Bill
304·675·7112. ·
ing, Experienced Professional

256·1219.

Dependable man will mow, till

small gardens, paint, put up hay,

etc . Fre&amp; E!ltimates. 304·675·

3Ci28.
Drivewa~s. patios, sidewalks,
basements &amp; garages, also lay
block &amp; small job~ 740-742·2261.

Dustbuste's Professional Clean-

ing,

Commer~ial

And Residential

sis lnt~rvention . Comptlill.,e

Salary And hcollont Bonelli

Experienced c;:arpenttf will do re, modeling, decks, vinyl aiding,
plumbing. Free estimates. Call

aonnei~Director. P.O. Box 1507,
Portsmouth, OH 45662, Or FAX:
Immediate opening for axperi· 140-353·6206. Applications Ac·
enced Detail/ Clean-up person. cepted Until Position li Filled.

Appl1 in person at Don Tate llo·
Inc.• 308 Ea11 Main Stree~
o..
~~ .. 57...
~-.~-· -·
tors,

Immediate opening for

e~~:peri·

EEO IMF_VH
1-..;_....o...;.._ _ _ _ __

SunPiua Home Health Services,
Inc.

anced aalasp&amp;opla·ln new and
used car sales· competitive sal·
aty and work .achedule. Apptw in
person at Don Tate Molars, Inc.,
308 Ea11 Main Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

SunPiut A RapidiW Growing Oi·
venfitied Home Health Agency
Has Savet'at Openings, For LPN &amp;
CNA's turrent LPN licunse &amp;
CNA C&amp;rliricates Are Required.
Please Submit Resume Wi1h Sal·

. -EDIATE OPEIINCl
Gallo Counly
C-OICo-

Ann Ctaypool, AN'
SunPius Home care
10249 Clillic:otna Plica

To:

Jac:klon, Ohio 4sGA()

Sei:rtterJ /Administrative Allil·

tant. This 11 A Verw Visible And
Challenging Position, People TAUCK DRIVER TAAININCI
Skills Very lmporrant. Computer.
Exptrtist And Writif~V Ability A It You Are lntere1ted In Obtain·
llvll S..... Bookkooplng Experi· ing_ A Commercial Oriwera li·
once Helpful, Pay Is Compotiti&gt;e, cense Aa A Truck Driwer And If
BaNd On Skilla And Experience. 'liMo ke A OioJocaled Wcwkor.

Send R01vmo· By May 7, 1998
To:
Gallia County CloonDar
OfCon)mOrco
Ananlion: R V. Graham
.
P.O. Box 485.
' Gallipoli~ OIWo 45831

Ali Roplleo Conlidontiai

Now hiring sate driven, good

poy. flexible houri. Apply In perOpening FGf Experktnced Marine

I Waler Toya, CheShire, Ohio, 740·
387-7802.

1---------' Business

Opportunity
110 PER HR

B&amp;!lt Snack /Soda Program In
USA. Your Own Biz lnv. Required

recommends that you do bus i·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money throUgh the
mail .until you have investigated
the offering.

21

o

Free Esrlmates.

Jim Shull. 304·875-1272. Refarencn upon request

Furniture repair. relini&amp;h and res·
10f81ion, also custom orders. Ohio
· Valley Refinishing Shop, larry ·

Ptillips. 740-992-6576.

Georges Portable Sawmill , don't
haul vour logs to the mill just call

':114-675-1957.

lnexpens i~e
made-to-order
gr&amp;eting cards, party lnvilations,
business cards, resumes, etc.·
call Gracie'• Greetings, 740·

742·1007.

College. Sct'olarships.
Business. Medical Bills.
NeverR&amp;pay.
Call Toll Free

t - 800-~18-9000 E•t. G-2814.

HOSIERY ROUTE
Earn Up To $65K Pee Year Part
Time Re&amp;tocking -l:ocal Stores

With Nama Btand Ladies Hosiery.
No Selling. Ac:;c::ounts Provided .
Your S1-4K ln\lestment 1!1 Se-

1--...:.._______

Part Time. Processing Insurance
Claims For Doctors And Dentisls.
Complete Training.

CLIENTS PROVIDED

800··937-4530 En 95.

'740~379-2502,

~

For Eali·

Lawnmowing, rooting. painting,
odd jobs wanted. Top quality, rea·
aona~e fates. Call for tree esti·

rrete' 740·992·9049.

~O. Bo• 272 .
80t0 Norm StatoRovto 7
Cneshi.,, Ohio 45620.0272 ·

Equal Oppor"nilJ Employer

llv in ~aton's basement

water·
proofing, all baaement reptirs
done, tree estimates, lifetime
guarantee. 10yrs on job experi-

ence. 304·875-214$.

3 B&amp;droom· Buement. Central\

Air. Carpeted, $30,000 7.t0·44er

1124, 740·446-1162.

'

3 Or 4 Bedroom Ranch, Optional

Famil1 Room, CA. 2 Both&amp;. In·
G(ound Pool. E•trul S73,000
740·446-4173.
I

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
I
Holzer Medical Center is seeking a licensed l;loilel
Operator. Candidates must have a High Pressur~
Boiler Operator's license in the State of Ohio.
J
Excellenl Wage &amp; Benefit Package
If interested, please contact:
Rosie Ward
Director of Human Resources
HOL2ER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631-1563
Phone: (740) 446·5105
•
Fax{TDD: (740) 446·51 06

FAMILY DOLLAR
llfW.SfORf OPIIIIIIG
WE NEED EXPERIENCED PEOPLE TO
PREPARE OUR NEW STORE
Sales, Cashle.r and ,
Stock Positions Available
If you have Retail Managem ent Ex pene nce .
w e would like to talk to y o u abo ut
Store Manager Traintng Progr am.
Apply In person on Friday, May 1t 1998
Between 9 AM - 5 PM

FAMILY DOLLAR STORES
40B Sliver Bridge Shopping Plaza
Galllpoliis, OH 45631

ECKER descendants of
Freqerick David Ecker
and Mary Stringfellow
Ecker, are invited to a
Family Reunion the
summer of 1998. For
additional
information
conlact Judy Ecker
Malloy, 801 s. w. 6 St.,
·Ft.
Lauderdale,
FL
33315, Phone or Fax:
954·523·7258

Position Immediately available
for mobile home Toter Driver.
Must have COL License.
No Sunday Work. Must bO hard
working and honest.
Benefits include VOcation,
llisurance. aM 401 K

Abo IIOHI'-- of IN -*l'•totellllf - *
itt •-'«lwl- of dttmlc.tot• ...,,..,., IIHirht;.,.
fi'OI!w• ... ffb ... , _ .70,000
m1 oountri• melt• "' IN AU!~ NoHI

p..,. ;,

o-

tWJtj (f'JIIW.

Akzo Nubel Chemicals in Gallipolis Ferry, WM t
career

posi!lr.;l'

ACCOUNTING SUPERVISOR

BINGO

7~ · 317·7312,

Adion Agencr

AI Work Guanonteed
304-175-1724

on 2.• acres in Harlbrd. S27.SOO.

304·882·3858.

Virginia hila en . excettem
available immediately.

find 0U1 It You Qualify Please

GaiUa -Uelg• Community

Joo'1 TV-VCR So"'loo
Froo EslimaiOI

Ph. 740-387-«1544
5c1Cionch

If this sounds ~ke you then
please apply at
·

To Their Prev· ·

Tr.aining Ohio
Will Be
Mariana.
Or

PTOfessronal
Services

Starting Pay range $11-$12 Hr.

. There Are 'Ad'Oualiflcations, However
Income Is No1 A. Factor.)

K~cky.

230

me•

2 &amp;tory, 2 l•r~e btdroomt,

neighborhood In ~~~~ GO!'" "
er ~l new wi,_, siding I Aiol.
740·992-8737.
3 Bedroom , 112 bam. 314 toaaor
ment, now "roo~ siding I .,;ndc&gt;Wf

lawn Mowing, No · lawn Too
Smalll
rriate&amp;

Ova To ~ Buoi·
Cutback, And ts

l ~;~n~:::'~~~

ttable And Very Simple. Call For
Free Broc:!'w.lre. 1-800·820-6782.

6u1ttr-Down Spout .
Moltile-Homo Roof Cllllling. fi•lst.

A Dislocated Worker ta Gener·
I A Person Who Has Worked
12 Uonths AI Ont Oc·
Is Now Unemployed Ot

l~r~~;i~IGA. JTPA· Preapplicatlon .
1•
Penod Is Approa:imately

310 Homes for Bile
VENDING: For Sale, Highly Prof·

ROOnll

Ralata&lt;l Costs.

140· 448·
Or 740-992·6829 .And Re-

REAL ESTAl E:.

lr;:~;::;;;::::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;.

Gallia ;Meig• Commuf'lity Action
Agenc1 MaY Ba Able To Assisl
You With Training, Testing, And

I

Business
Opportunity

FREE
CASH
GRANTS!

MEDICAL BILLING
Estimates, 7-40·388·8060, 740· Work On Your Computer, Full Or

• Paid Holidays

5987, GaJiipolis, OH 45631 .

FINANCIAL

Sorvlcoo, Compedlive Ra101, Free

• Excolent W.oeo

740·44B·941B Or 1·800·872· Apply To•SMHC, Inc., Alto.: Per·

oers AI 740.448·2450.

cured By lnvt. Call 1·800·758·
B&amp;B LaW. Mowing &amp; Lanclscap. 4881 Anytime.

Call Aher 5:00 ~~~ . 740.388·9422

lntttview Appoinlmenll Only I Call Package. Full· Time Position
Benneus Heating &amp; Cooling At Available Immediately. Please

Will Mow &amp; Trim lawns. Reason·
llble Rates, Contact Joe Saun·

And E1am lnlo Call 1·800·813· $4K ·20K 1·800-617-8430 E"l
3585, E•t 6475. 8 A.M .· 9 PM., 7 732.
Dayslds, inc
1-,--------INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
170 · Miscellaneous

ing, II ower beds, land acaplng,
sidewalks, edging, mowing ,
etc .... Free Estimates . Call Bill

Scenic Hills Nursing· Cen1er Is

We Oo V!rr;l Siding, Replacement
Windows, Roofs , Room Addilions,
Aemodeting, Ceramic Tile &amp; Hard·
wood Floora. NltW Construction.
No Job Too Btg Or Too Small!
Conlact Joe Saunden At 7410·
446·2450, References Avatlable.

~~~~~~~~~; 32 Lono st. Ru · 210

Wit Oller Very Competilive Wag·
es, Ben&amp;lits A.nd Working Conclitions In A.ddition To The Chance

Now Acc:;eptlng Applications For
Part-Time STNA'!i· Shilts S:OO

'

Eotimotes. Caii740.. 41-D3t8.

Shrubs &amp; weeds uimmed, mulch·

Streel St. Mar,~ PA 15857.

42811.

Profeuional Tree Sef'VIce, Stump
POSTAL JOBS TO $18.35 MR.
Inc:. Benetila. No Experience. For Remo~al. Free E'ltimatesl In·
App. And Exam Into.. Call 1-800· aucanct, Bidwell, Ohio. e14-388·
813·3585, E•t 6~74, a·A.M. ·9 9648,B14-387-7010.
P:U., 7 Day !I fds,inc.
Shafef't Lawncar&amp; Sen~lce, Free

eratlons.

sources Department, 1935 Stale

Mow1ng, trimming o, odd jobs; ba·
bysming, any shift. Call J1m or
Paula in Miner&amp;vllle, 740·992·

-·-:-:=~=:-:::-:--:-:-:-:-::-

Mental Health Principleo And Crl-

• Paid Vacajons

Technician. Apply At Big Bo1s

•

.

Ori\lerlll &amp; 010 Welcome. Harold
hiH Tn~dling 1100-842-0853.

Card of Thanks

I

For More Information ~
446-2342 or 992-2156

AGE 550A OLDER

Maintenance Needs ·

Open Hause

Help Wanted

lOft al Donino'~ in Pt. A.sent

70 Pine St.

Ohio Vall~y ·
Visitors Center

Up To .27' 1111. 1II Yr.I Excel.
Benelitl &amp; Good Homotime. E1p.

1

4~·7283

441-0770

Span, 304-675-1429.

Earn $1.000 wee1111. Stvlllng on· Eat •.VENDING r1e. ·Muat Soli
velopes, no prior experience. tree l ,y 5110 20 Locellons. IlK.
/jetails, oencfSASE to: N.B. Copt 12,300 +/Mo. Income. tOO'II.
174·301 East 5th Ave. Suite 112 Finance WI Good Crodlt. 800·
&amp;orllcano, Te1ao 75110.
380-2113t Ellt4114.

$8.00

.

tential. NCJ exp nece11ary, mua1 late-Model, Assigned Conven·

bo aJ,Ioostt8. Cali 614·992·6387 tionals . Paid Weeki,. 800·237·
(an~time) or 304·675-5955 af1er ..... 2.
8pm Wed IIVu Sat
..:.__.:.:..:::..:.=:_----1 Driver ... Company Paid Driver
AVON 1 All Areas 1 Shirley Training Prog. W tOp~. To Earn

workshops and developing col· .
110 OWADI
11-tive elbno lhraugltaut oigltt
countl•s. Trawel ·required. Evtn·
Avon $8 ·$20 IHr, No Door -To. lng and - . n d houll,roquitod.
boor, Easr Cash, Fun, .1·800- Send l•tter of intereat, resum•
381~ indlslllrep.
and 1hrH empiO)er reflt•nca ~
c---"--:_..:..__ _ _ _ 1 April 27, UU to Plonnod Por·
Avon • $8 ·120 /Hr. No Door To onlhood ol Southnlt Oltla. :we
Door. Eaay C11hl 1·800-281· Richland Awenu•. Athtnt, Ohio
f-ft_:»_i_ndl_lllllr_op..:______ .;,;4570~1::.,E:::OEIE:=.:::SP.:.:·_ _ _ __

3 Bedroom ranch, 1 mile from
city, excellent neighborhood
Lovely home, Must See
Priced to sale at $75,000
OPEN HOUSE
·Sat. 1·5 pm
Sun 2·4pm
162 Woodland Dr. Gallipolis

Drlvera. He Otters Very Good
Pay, New Trucks &amp; Home Often.
Must Be 23 Yrs Okt WI 1 Yr. Yer·

be atleaat 18. Call 614·992-6387 W. Fla- Exp.. Clau A COL WI
(anytime) or 304·875·5955 altar Hazmet &amp; Good MVR. CaH Cur~
8pm Wed onru Sat ·
&amp; llention Thio Ad
Ul-435-4010
$$$ DANCERS WANTED S$$
Ex~ienl opportunity lor the rtght Driver· Earn Up ·To ••o.ooo.
girl. $500(+)per week oorning po· Your 111 Yoor With USA TRUCKI

total body aerobic fitness

Centenary, Ohio

· · Owner retiring

Excall.n1 opportunity for the rfghl
girl. SSOO(+)per weell earning potential. No· exp nec:e11arw. mult

Ollila -Illig• Community

7:00 to 5:00 at Jacks
Transmission on 2nd Ave .

2 Puppies
8 Weeks old .
Brown Males

' OPPORTUNITY KNOCKINCI .
~===~====-I Landatar lnway Hao A Contract
' $$$ DANCERS WANTED S$$·
WI Limited Openings For Flatbed

)ilicotlon.

Health Aider Exercise bike

GIVEAWAY

Halp Wanted

·wilaego"'

Block

o

Powdered Metal Companies In

Several Hair Stylists, As Well Aa
A Working Salon Manager, ·No
Clientele Need&amp;d,' Juat Have
Sheers &amp; license At Hand, &amp; We
Shall Supply. The Real. Benefits

As FoJowed·

Monday Through Frjdoy, 15. t5 - - - - - - - - - -

Baton &amp; Flag Corps
Yard Sale Saturday and
Sunday, May 2nd '&amp; 3rd

'

HIOCI-725-11550

Per Hour, Up To 20 Hours Per
We&amp;k. We Also Have Non-Oriv· Drive,. OTR (Aieo, new OJO
lng JObS AYIIIabte.
.
Pocklfl) Ragional FlalbodiVan

all our customers.

French City Twirlers

500 Room

Speaker:

.

ROEHL

~~---------------l~w«

Turkey-Ham Dinner

··

at. C»t.-5769.

HAIRSTYLisT /SALON
$0.81 1.82 All lliles · Excellent
MANAGER
Ins.• 2500 + Mileo f'Neek. Solo Or
Slnlrl SCyle Will Soon Be Opening
Wanied To Buw: Used Uobile Team. 95-. No Touch. ••· /53' ~n · The N&amp;w Wai -Mart. Super
-Homeo. 740·146·0175, 304·875· Van Or Flalbtd. National Or Eaot· Cente_r (And It OWned By Regia
ern Fleer: Talk To Our Orivet~l
!1965.
Corporation) And Will Be Hiring
Call Miko AI Our lloyton Vard.

discontinued

'

Training . Owner /Operator •

!Jan ted To Buy : Junk Auto's An~

Spring Raffle Results
Turkey GunLeland Hamilton
$1 00 Gift Certificate. Ronald Riffle

Gallipolis

Treatmentl, Furnittlrt, Reaume

&lt;.ondilion, 740-446·9853.

Gallia County
Gun Club

H&amp;R

11

ova Wall Repairs. CALL lUCK· .
EVE HILLS .CAREER CENTER, Experienood Timber Cvner !'loadCanllnol Frolghl Carriero
Clun late Modal CArs Or ADULT SERVICES TODAT AND od, 7ol0-882-7318.
.
Nitro, WV 1-800-220-2421
Trucks, 1ggo Models' Or Nawer, REGISTER. 7~0· 245· 5334 Ext.
Boyd Adklno
Full
or
pact
ti,.,._,
...
,
1tarler,
moti·
,Smilh Buick Pontiac, 11100 Ellt· 20g ··Colt $45.00. Cta11 Will Be
vatad to succeed. must hive
ern Allll1lt; Ga~polls.
Held On Our Rio GnondoCampvs.
sales experience and be able to
P&lt;M'DERED METAL
Ford Tractor 800 Serift No 0..1·
DRIVER · ARE "IOU TIREO Of
work with public, knowledge ol
POSITIOI'IS
era, 740·448-387•.
floor coveti ng a decoraltng a .
LONCI HOURS OR LOW PAY?
plus, long dmo comrritmenl nee· KEYSTONE
POWDEREC
J &amp; D Auto Parto. Bu,lng Co. Drl¥erw • New Pay Program. ell~ry,
&amp;end retume to: Oatly METAL COMPANY, One Of The
wrecked or !lalvaged vehicles. Average 1997' Wage Wa1
Sentinel. P.O. 8oJ: 728-80. Pomer- largest And Most Progfesstve
304-773-5033.

EMPLOYM ENT
SERVICES

Licensed &amp;
Bonded
20 yrs exp.
740-388-9515

I

I

wv 281151.

BULLETIN BOAR·D

'

''

'

231 or wnte: Bill Bright Land Use

Aveilablol740-37ll-2720.
Absolvie Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·
vor And Gold Colno. Prootattl,
:::-::'-:-=-,--::--,-.,.:.-:--,--1 Diamonds. Antiquo -lr,, Gofd

C
ome. aiiP•O)

Satvrd.y, w11 2, 1008 Or Satur· monll: proper ttlophono etl·

Are From 8:00 A.ll. ·5:00 P.ll. Point Pleaunt Roglller 200
Bv11ng Standing Timber &amp; Land Cantor, Adult Strvlctt To Roo· Main St. Pt. Plauant. WV
50::.·- - - - - - - Wlt!tT-. 740-8112-7318.
istor. 740-245-5334 E1t. 20A. Tvl· =255=
lion: $40. .
EXPERIENCED Roo foro, Cor;
• BUYING TIMBERLANDS
DCJ.IT'ftlURSI!Lf·IASI
pontart
And Carpontoro Holpero.
We .,• .paying top ""- "" dmbarland that Ia ready to cut now Jual In Time Far Those Spring Rer.rtncea, Tf'l.nlportafton, Valid
or ready to cut in 10 to 15 ytafl R.palrs .. : Twelwe HouraJThrll Driver• lh::en11 And Toolt Re· or timberland which has jutt Evenlngs) 01 BASIC HO E AI· qulrod. Chrlstian'a ConllrvcHon.
been cut recently. We also buy PAIR ··Aprll 2e. 2ll. &amp; 30 From Inc. 8-SP.II. 740 He 4514,
timber on lhe stump. For more In· e :OO P.ll. ·10:00 P.ll. Topics Exptrlonood Saleoporson- Homo
formation call toll tree, without COV6rod Wlll116: Re!&gt;alring Lamp Furnlohlngl, Carpet, Wlnclow

773-5785 Or 3:!4-773-5447.

odlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Frlday. llonday odlllon

Help Wanted

Contact Buckeya Hills Cateer

terv1ce. liunaed
tee,Ohio &amp; ·west Virginia, 304 ·

DfAOtiN£' 2:00p.m.
tho do' btlort lht od

11'0

day. M- 18. 1!198. Both ClaiiOI queue; and gonoral ollico okllla.
-·
Sand roavmo to: Bow CW·18 c/o

flll2-857ll.

auction

BeP.ald In Advanot.

Help wanted

Two Clas'*l To Chaase From I pleadings lnd other legal docU·

Antiqun fa t:IMn used turnlturt,
wlll buw one piece or complete
hou1ehold, Oaby t.tarlln, UO·

&amp; VICin'lty
Rick Pearson Auction Comp•ny,
--=-::-..,-:,-,-..,;...,..--l'ull lime auctioneer, complet•

. Faller Uri&lt;nown, 740-319-2!i39.
8 rown and oylack Mixed Br.eed
PvPP1 Foma~ Poo~bl, Part Boa·
gl&amp;. very FriftbaJy· and 1 gnble

Spaulding at Vinton Fire Dept
whose house burned lasl
Saturday. Please call (7 4o)
388-9971 or (740) 388·0114.

'

88 Disconnect
90 Atlanta arena
91 Museum's.contents
92 Picks
95 .O.T. priest
96 Flavoring plants
98 Allractive
100 Yam luzz
101 Scrap ol food
102 Big cat
104 War vessel. for
short
105 Kind of sale
106 Give money for
107 Threesome
108 Weathercocks
110 Actress Kidman.
112 Pain
113 Bicycle part ·'
114 Compositions
116 Bl:o~en·down horse
1.17 Bell
118 Physical stryggle
119 AighiiYI
•
· 121 Bodybuilder's forte
124 Dye
125 Word "with netve or
laughing
128 Kid
130 Water vapor
131 Actor Aykroyd
132 Laurel or.Kenton
136 Astem
137 Allude
139 Public notices
140 Shambles
141 Frozen dessert
142 Unauached
144 Kind of lamp
147 - ·Goldwyn-Mayer
149 Great artery
150 Senior
151 Weird
152 Another time
153 Tough alloy
154 Suspicio•s
tSS Appears
156 Bodies of water

1

.5211.

Auclio.n

Kentucky 314 Aott Weiler Pup, To Good
Hof110 Wilt\ Kids. 740-3n-2443.
Gentleman Seeking Compans1on·
ship From Nice Femate For Talks. Beautiful puppies, moth&amp;r regis·
Walka &amp; Fri&amp;ndahip. Send Re· lered Collie ~La1111}, lalher Shelpllat To: CLA 308, c:lo Gallipolis liZ ! lab. 304·67S..3024.
Daily Tribune, 825 Third Avenu&amp; Beautiful, Friendly, Black PupPW;
Gatlipolla, OH ~5831 .
' Mother AKC Golden Retnever

o

OPENIHQ SOON
CPA I fiRST AID COURSES E•porloncod Legal Stcrttory; r•
For Thoao Individuals working qulro good comput,er tklllt In· Help needed·E.IIperienced cook1,
Wlfl Tho Pubic Md !Or Children. eluding WP 5.0; knowledge ol kitchen help, watets &amp; Wl1tress -

~u11 Moore owner, 740·102·

•e" Mile V•llow flag yard .. 10.
Pomeray /. Middltporl, May 1·2.
Reglstef, pick up ~ur flag fDdlr', •

Sale

11

In• Antlqun, Pomerov. O,lo,

n y

===::;:::=:::====1
Wtdemt-yer'l
Servtc~.
Gallipolis
Ga~polia. Ohio 740·319-2720. .

le•ington ,

MEET TOUR
COMI'ANIONI
.1MJ0. as.g

Yard

Wanted to Buy

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Antiques, top pf'lttl paid, HIYer·

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

:.: ,~ L-------------~~...,.------------~------------------~~----------------------_J
:; ACROSS

~~~·

70

90

&amp; VICI It

Thomu · Rldgo Rd. Aroa. RE · 80
WARD. 304-885-3107,

from HoiTll'fll Frtt Oetatl&amp;: wma 3 mlnen paw kiuans. gray with
To : Checks, 3825 N1agara Dnve whitt, liner rlined, 740·892·7362.

Pul!llc Notlca

SUNDAY P·UZZLER

r•

LOST : Male Golden Reuie~er.
child' I pet, answera to ·ranntt"

~~~~~~~:~-~~--G~I~ve~a~w~ay~~
Daily Chtcksl Pto&lt;;euing Uail :"'

caulk, you'll also need to cui the noz·
zle of 1he tube to produce a proper·
size bead to fill the joint. Squeeze 1he
tube. pushing the caulk ahead of the
spout. Smooth the bead with your finger. wearing smooth-textured glov~s .
Sloppy caulking i~ a s ur~ way to
spoil the appearance of the tub joint.
For professional results. take a tip
from painlers and reach for masking
tape. Posilion the tape along both
sides of your planned line of caulk so
thlll your finger will plow the excess
caulk onto the tape when you smooth
the bead. Also, before smOQthing the
bead of caulk. wet your gloved fin·
ger with di shwashing liquid so thai it
moves easily along the caulk.
After you smooth down the caulk.
carefully lif1 away lhe p pe. You'll get
a caulk line with crisp, straight edges
- and a handful of goopy tape.

Public Notice

Public Notice

·.Sunday, Aprll26, 1998

Sunday, Aprll26, 1998

In memory of our son,
MARK ALAN
BEEGLE
who passed away
April26, 1992.
You will always be
loved and missed.
Mom &amp; D!!d,
Daughter Nickle,
Twin Sister, Melanie,
. Bruce &amp; Jessica,
qiaudia &amp; Wayne

After ~lmost 9 yrs
you're still a dream
come true for mel
I love you so much it
· hurts! But, it's a nice
kind of' pain.
Love;
Stephen

.
'Well Stepfieu fim it is:
Your 'Birtfid11y!
!)(ltfiougfi you· no longer witli m, Wt' still
celebrate your ·rrfi. •(fie lime 1ve lim/wasn't
near mougli, but we risfi tfie memorit•s you
left Jts . &lt;J'fie (JIIe tfiitrg we taw is our
Rnowlulge of your love. 1fJe Rnow in aur lirarts
and our minds, tfiat you loved us moughjor a
lifetime. 'Evmtliougfi we cannot jet/ your antiS
around us, or hear your laugfite'(. youDre witfi
US . &lt;J'fie 011e tfiing Wf IVi/1 always fiave is OUr
dreams . rr'here, I can hear you, feel you, love
you. rrdriver in my dreams you will .be.
Jfappy 'Birtfiday 'Baby!
'Forever,
.C.oretfa &amp; :Moriafi

•

MON. &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST

$950.00
$50.00 OR MORE
- PER GAME

BEECH "GROVE
ROAD

I.S./I.A Degree in Accounting l 2·4 yrs.

Industrial «
menufacturing letting. Must have experience
in auperviaion, preparatiOn of financial 1,..r.,ais,
cost accountiltg and r.,orting. • Positio&lt;l 1lio
r~uifes 1 high degree of 1RIIytir..&gt;l lll1d
computer sldb.

..perienc!l preferred · in en

We offer 1 cumpetitive lllarylbentlita pecklge.
Please tend your retume with HllrY history to:
Akzo Nobel Chemicals Inc:.
Human Aei91Mces O.pt.
State Route 2
P.O, BO• 1721
Gallipolia Ferry, WV

2!ili111·1721

WANTED:

'

Salesperson for local
automobile dealership.
Experience required.
•
Health benefits.
Reasonable hours.
Call ,740-992-2196

For .appointment.
..,

'

"'

�•
Page D4 • Jhnhaa tlliuus-Jlentitul
310

Homes for sale

a V1nyl Fenced

Yar d Fam1l y Room &amp; La undry
Room &amp; Wa lk Our Basement

$8o ooo

7&lt;0 2&lt; s- ;s2o

320

310 Homes for Sa le

• Bdrm 2 ba th Pt Pleasant
home t8001q It EM cond 1
nel~borllood 1!04 S75-71211
4 Bedroom Bt~ck

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant ,

o,

S788

Baum Add1tlon Pomeroy three
bed1oom bflck home 1 112 ba th&amp;
large I v ng room large kltchen
d n.ng room anached garage all
electric corn er lot S75 000 740
985 4110

1 5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM
&amp; Bank
Repo s Call 1 800 522 27 30 X
lro&lt;l

$4 000 loc a l Gov

t

GOV T FOR EC LO SED Homes
From Penn es On $1 Delinquen t

Tu Repo s REO s Your Area

Toll F•ee (I) BOO 218 9000 Ex&lt;

H 2814 For Current liSllng!

House for sale next to Salisbury
Elementary SchoQI three bed

roo m hvmg room fam 1ty room
large garage wtth anached work
shop one and t /2 acres Must
see to appreciate call 740 992
6375 after 8pm
F1 ve Pom t~ ar ea Log home 3
bedrooms 2 baths half base
ment bas•c appliances full PQrch
on lront deck sett ng on 5 acres
w 3 car garage $120 000 740
992 7788 after 6 pm
Mason W Va 2 Bedrooms Can
ual Heat Air Anderson Til l In
W ndow s Full Basement Front
And Back Porches 740 99 2
304 1 740 992 3557
Middleport beauulul two story 3
b( 2 ba th large I r &amp; tr oak
doors &amp; trim Sm1th 1 custom oa~
cabinets Jenn air range d•sh
washer detached garage by ap
pomtment 740 992 5243

MUOSOCK RO

ALL BRICK

RAf'.ICH on 17 4 acres fu ll base
menl two car garage barn
fenced pasture PhOne John ERA

MARTIN

&amp;

ASSOCIATES 614

593 3333 01614 698 3771
New 2800 Sq Fl Br ck Ranch 3
Bedroo,ns 3 Baths Front Porch
De&lt;k Base1r01nt (740)441-134S
One p us acres 4 bedroom
t':lu se 3 year old :ud1ng 1mme
dtaut po ssesston S15 000 cash
'or negot ate land contract 517
~ as! Mam 1n Rutland 740 992

o4514
!Rodney V tlage II 4 Bedrooms 1

'Balh Rar&lt;:h W1lh 241&lt;24 Demched

:1nsu aled Heated Garage Fam1ly
tAoom Wnh F11ep1ace ln§ert Ear
In Kitchen W1th Oak Cabmets
f. enced In Back Yafd Ready To
1Move In $68 000 740.245-5946

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Buck Ranch Home 1 1 112 Salt!
Carpet N ce KitChen &amp; 0 n ng
Room Central A r Gas Heal ful
Basement Level lot Large Car
port l ocated On Second StrPe
Galhpoli5, 740 446 257?

320

Mobile Homes
for Sa le

14 • 70 38R $999 Do11111n &amp; ONLY
S179 permo free ar &amp; tree skrt

ng I 888 928 3&lt;26

1979 Elcona 14•70 Mobtle Home
3 Bedrooms 2 B ~uhs f'1repU1ce

S9 500 140 2&lt;S0330

1979 Schultz mobile home
14 l70 2br goOd cond 304 675

6256

New C ayton Uob1le Home Gaf
den Tub Sk~hght CA bn Rented
l ot Sell Cheap! 740-4-'!e 94128

0 scount Mob41e Home Parts &amp;
Accessor es Water Heaters V
nyl Sk rung Kns $299 95 An
cho s Wood &amp; F•berglass Sieps
Roof Coa110g s Doors W1ndows
Plumb ng &amp; Electrtca1 Supphes
Blockmg Wood &amp; Wedges And.
Mote Call Bennet! s Mot&gt; le
Home S~o.ppl y At 1 740 446 9416

0 vorce Fo rces Sales Take over
paymen l s 2br 2 b:l!h f1nan01n g
avatlablc 304 755 5566

-

Hugo 28x8 0 3BR 1 112 bath
Sra I ng al ONLY $39 999 Maf\¥
opl ons ava abe 1 888 928
342S

large sete c!lon of used homes 2

1981 Oakwood 14x65 $12 500
IUC COnd
1988 Clayton 14X 10
wlhea t pump $ 13 900 w 1 de
I \ltr local Call K &amp; K f.A ob1 le
Homes 304 675 3000 between
Bam Spm

or 3 bedtooms S1arnng at $2995
Ou!Ck delve y Call 740 385

198 9 14X72 2 Bedrooms 2
&amp; ths 3110 Acre Lot Heal P mp

Oak wood Homes N 1ro WV 304

A, .,

Carport Back Porcn Po e

740 388 8234

1991 Redman Breezewood 3
Bed ro om s 1 112 Baths 14x70
$1 2 000 Ftrm 740 361 7094

e H om~' 2
Gas F e
pl ace Garden Tub On Rema Lot
F nanc ng A\la Iable 140 245
9738 Leave Message

9621

LIMITED OFFER
1998 Ooublew de 3br 2 baths
$ t 699tdown $259/mo OnJv at

ISS 588S

2 Payments Mo ... e In No
Pa)lments Aller 4 Years t 800
3&amp;.1 6862

N£MI' 3 Bedroom Home
011 y$169 oo Per Month
, 800 251 5070

Cla~ton Mob
B e dr o ~t ms 2 Baths

948 5678

2 Bedrooms Remodeled 7&lt;10
446-2470
Double W de
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
$1 885 Down $269 Par Mon1h
Includes Dol very And 5et Up
Call1 eoo 251 5070
Save My Cred 1 Asuume
ments 304- 736 7295

P.&lt;~y

New 1998 14x70 three bedroom
ncludes 6 momhs FREE lot rent
llC ludes sk r l ng del uxe s1eps
~nd setup Only $1 87 08 per
mon h W!lh $1075 down Calf 1

BCO 837 3238

NEW BANK REPO S Only 3 olt
StU under wa Han ty own er I
l"ianc ng ava able
304 755
719 I
New Double w de 3BR 2 batr'l
$1 325 Down &amp; $205 pe mo 1
888 928 :3426

Smgle Paronl Program Spec al
r na nctn g on 2 3 &amp; 4 bedroom

homes Paym•nt• •• low ••
S 180 Call now 304 755 5885

ABANDON HOME Make 2 oay

$1 325 Down S205 Mo Free a ~r
&amp; free skirung 1 WXI -691 en1

SPRING SPECIALS
$499 Cown
9 I Find Rat ..
$198/Mo Payment•
S17 995 on 3BR
FrM O.hv•ry &amp; Set up
Only At Oakwood Homes
NIIJO wv 304 755-5885

TAX SPECIAL
New 3br $999Jdo wn $ t89 /mo
Free Set up &amp; Dehvery Only 3
Let\1 Only at Oakwood Homes N
tro wv 304 755 sees
Very N ee 16x80 Redman 3 Bed
rooms 2 Fu I Baths Garden Tub
K \chen Appliances Ce ntral A r
Deck Already Set Up On Lot
Take 0\ler Payments 01 $298 Per
Month 740 446 0571
OW Repo 4 Bedrooms 2 Bath s
Easy Tet"ms 1 800 383-6862
Repo s
Double W des And Smgle W 1es
Won 1La st longI
Ca I 1 888- 736 333"

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
"IATIENTION DEVELOPERS
SMALL BUSINESS
COUNTRY ESTATE)
63 95 Acr es App ro x 6 Acre
l ake Mob ile Home With Lar ge
Add On Den Galha County
Coun ty Wa ter And EleC triC
$2 600 Per Acre 740 388-86 /B
3 Acres Rece nt y La nd scaped
Wllh Water Tap $8 000 7-40 258
789 Ser ous lnqutrles Only
4 Bu1ld ng Site s 2 Acre s eac h
conven en1 yet ptl\late 6 m•les
!rom Po m P easanl 1 114 m1le off
Bethel Ad oft Sarid h•l no s ngle
w des $14 16000ea 304 075
7948 OOiore. 9pm
La ge Wooded Bu ld ng lots Wl!n
Some Restnct ons Ncar S R 850
Jusl M nutes From New lndustr al
Park Some Res t r~CI on s 740
441-0541 Atrer 5 PM
Several 1wo acre l o t ~ for sale on
New l ma Ad 740 742 2803

ments assume lo an owno I
nancu'lg ava lablo 304 755 7 9J

Anent on Mob 1e Home Owners

A•eas l a&gt;9eS1 lmenlo•y 01 ln1e•

therm &amp; Coleman H~ al Pumps
A r Co nd toners Furnac es &amp;

Pans Huge Buy1ng Power Means
The LbweSI Instal ed p, ce Easy

Over The Phone Bank F nanc ng

Call Bennelto Mob1le Home HTG
~ CLG I 800 672 596V
auv IN APRIL
No PaymeniS Unl l July 1996
E Z F ~nanctng

Call F•nance Lme

I ooo 9&lt;8- 5678

Free Sot up &amp; Oehver y
:____
_:___-'-:~ 11

SPIWN(j CR.IIJ'l SHOW
In COnJUnCIIOn With
National Nurs1ng Home Week
The hours of our Craft Show Will be from 10 00
a m -4 00 a m There IS no entry fee but table
space IS hm1ted Along w1th our Craft Show th ere
w1ll be a Spnng Carmval For more 1nformat1on or
to reserve a table for the Craft Show please
contact M1ke Cntes at 740 992 64 72

Pixe[Cam Systems
Slate of the art v1deotapmg and d1g1tal
ed1bng of weddmgs. speeches,
reumons, trammg documentanes.
sportmg events- as well as st1ll
1mage capture, e&lt;htmg and arch1vmg

740-446-0098
Our goal IS to bnng the latest Ill
graphiCS technology to the md1v1dual
and small busmess at reasonable cost

Q

AUCTION
LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN
8580

St. Rt 588 (Old Rt. 35) Gallipolis, Ohio

740•245·9056 Or 740•245·9866
We have a sale every Fnday mght al 6 3D llems to
1nclude household
glassware
furniture
tools
ant•ques m1sc 1tems Every week has something
drtferentl Lots of fun come &amp; enJOY our smoke Tree
bu1ldmg G1ve us a call 1f you have something to sell
We also do estate sales
- 2nd Fnday mght of every month 1s our ant1que sale'

SATURDAY 10:00 A.M., MAY 2, 1998
Location 1983 Zoar Church Road Oh•o Gong tr am
Galhpohs to Jackson Oh•o lurn left on Rl 35 lruck slop on
D1xon Run Road lurn nghl on CH and D Road Go
approximately 2 mt!es turn nght on Evans Road then nght on
Zoar Church Road Sale '" s1ght watch for s1gns
Note After selhng farm and movmg out of state Voila and

Joan Maynard w111 offer lo H1ghesl b•dde• lhe lollow ng
'Firm Equipment 1990 long 251 0 4 wheel dnve melallop
1800 hours w1lh heavy duly loader NS6 New Holland Rubber
wheel rake 530 Heston round baler lt4786 6 h International

buSH nag hay wagon d1sk plow 6 ft g•ad e• blade 12 3
poml post hole digger 16 ft eleclnc corn elevator Long
Model ~1 !&gt;37 5 ft 3 pi rOIOIIIIer 2 boHom plows 3 pi

terttllzer spreader B n double Cull1packer Ford 6 ft mower

tor parts 3 pt hay teeler
All Equtpmtnl Extr• Good Shape and Field Ready
"Hay Approximately 350 square bales Fescue &amp; Clover 1Sl
CU"Ing

Urd Qerdcn t;gulgment Uke New. 5 hp Cra" sman garden
tracta&lt; 2 year old 1440 Cub Codet 48" cui Sears 4 hp push

mower 8 hp 2 wheel eltctrlc ll~rt Weed Ealer
'Miac Toolt Aulomatlc ca~ feeder 2 •ound hay leede&gt;S
1 000 gallon fuel tank I 000 BTU Ready healer log cham
binder piJ)e &amp; die set 4-16ft I beamer house Ja&lt;k 24" p1pe
wrenches 24" crescenl wrencnes oulbulld1ng lull of m•sc
tools
•Hou..hokl 4 recliners maple lea cart oak tea cart
wroughl Iron umb&lt;afill labia &amp; c~a"s sweeper Fenlon
!I!MSWare (0!1SOie color TV s.-eral exercise equlpmenl 24
ft trampoline refrlQtl'...,. Vlct~rlan BOla double microwave
lr"!lenor

glassware

~urlnes •

* lltny More lllmt Too ljumeroua To Mention *

1- E N... - H-trton, W Vt
Good Cletn Stle- Calhltr Chtck or Utter from Bank
Seller

Yollll .,.cl ~oan 111yn11rd 1-740-286-8132

L. E. J4HI 304-175-8325 or 675-Neal
""" 1171 • WYAA Member

•

Gallia·Meigs
Community Action Agency
8010 N. State Route 7
P.O. Box 272
, Cheshire, OH 45620·0272

740 25&amp;9190 Between 6 9 PM
3 Bedroom House In GRII pohs
S3251Mo Plus Oepos 1 &amp; Reier
-ences No Pets 740 446 1734

3 bedroom house m Pomeroy
740 843-52t8
3 bedrOOr'ft

2 bat h Mme m
Rae no 6 month !case &amp; do.po sll
requ red $4~ !M'r month pease
ca I 1 BOO 295 2928 !rom 9 6pm
evonngs 1 eop 818 2547

Ma•n OH1ce 388 8826
958 Clark Chapel Ad
B1dwell Oh10 45614

360

Real Eslate
Wanted

C ash Pad For Land In Ga lha
County Blac kbur n Really 740

446-{1008

I NEED LAND
It You Have Land I Need To
Hear Fr om You NO W! We Pay
Top SS$ For Farms And Vacant

Lan d 20 To 300 Acre;s Road
Fronlage And Woods A Plus
Calf M ke Amhony Land Co Ltd

PUBLIC NOTICE

'

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
Saturday, May 2, 1998
10 ooam
Th•s •s to make money to work on the Grange
bu•ld•ng Located from St Rt 124 1n Langsville Oh10
Take Co Rd t approx 3 m•les to Star Grange
ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITE...S"
Aladdm lamp rock 1ng cha•r Seth Thomas mantle
clock cuckoo clock Elg•n &amp; lmpenal pocket watches
na•l keg stone Jars 8. tugs m1sc d•shes &amp; glassware
some Carn.val wl1 1te treadle sewmg mach1ne
w oo d,e~ boxes &amp; crates wooden magaz•ne rack
foldmg cha• rs &amp; oH•ce desk Zorro &amp; Hogans Hero
lunch boxes 1ron skillets blue Jars gas lamp
kerosene 1an1ern stra1ght razors clay !lour pots
slands p1cture trames #4 l /2 d1nner bell and ect
••MISC"
t 988 Dodge Ra•der 4x4 utility Good cond•llon
covered wagon camper sleeps 6 Craftsman rad1al
arm saw
"HOUSEHOLD &amp; ECT
I 0 speed Mossberg b1cycle form1ca top d1nette &amp; 4
cha1 rs glass top table &amp; 4 chalfs stereo s w1th &amp;
wi thout speakers padded portable bar w/2 stoots
nn•'le t•le d1sh washer gas furnace 25 Zenith color
TV s 19' B&amp;W TV truck topper for shortbed snow
blower queen s1ze waterbed new mattress/heater lull
wave student desk exerc1se b•ke sta1r climber
cllmatrol room air conditioner 13' B&amp;W TV 30 gal
natural gas water heater approx 6 mo kitchen
cab1n et wrought lfOn posts 3 nd•ng mowers and
more to be cons1gned
~ To consign call Rick Macomber 740-742-2183
Dan Smith· Auctioneer Ohio 11344
Cash Positive ID -Refreshmenls
The Grange Will 11~ Pork &amp; Chicken on the wood
cooker Come sell or buy Eat and enJOY the day &amp;
help the Grange

•

Furnished EHicltncy AH Ulllltltl

"'"ed 51&lt; 44S9921allot 5pm.

Braeinc'h~Offit:ra.tee

446-6806

Pa1&lt;1, Share Balh $185/Mo ;17
Second Avenue Gall•polla 74G-

Houat 3 Bedroom' Full Bath -446-39ol5
Full Buement Garag&amp; 0 n1nSJ
k 11chen lwtng Room Laue Grac1ous ltvtng 1 and 2 bedroom
S-400/Mo Depo111 Credit Reier apartments 11 V1tlage M"nor and
ences 740 446 1540 740 448 Rrvers•de Apa.rtmenrs 1n Middle

23 Locust 51
Gallipolis, Oh10
45631

•5:_:5.;.5_________ pon From $2&lt;9 $373 Ca11740
1992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tunDn

OPEN HOUSE

•2 Apar tments In R1o Grande
Area ACJOU From Co ll ag e 1 Modern 1 Bdrm all utilities paid
Room 1 Bath Uttlit•e• Included except eldcmc tn Ga11ipol•s Fer

Sunday, April 26, 1998
1 :30 to 3:30 p.m.
1457 Neighborhood Rd
Gallipolis, Ohio
Hostess Cara Casey

5881

Newly Remodeled 1 Bedroom
Furn•ahvd /Unfurnished Down
s ta~rs Uhlmes Paid No Smoking
No Pets Park ng 6 Month laue

S200 Oepos1t $300JMo 740 44636117

;2 Bedroom Beau11ful Al\ler V1ew
Refe rences Deposll NO pets•
Foster' s Mobile Home Park 740

2 bedroom

5218

Public Sale and Aucllon

N1ce One BA Unturmshed Apart

ment Range &amp; Refr•g Prov1ded
Wa ter &amp; Gar bag&amp; Pa•d Oeposn

PUBLIC AUCTION
Thursday Evemng 6 00 pm
April 30th 199 8
Localed at 40924 Laurel Cliff Rd ' Watch for
s1gns on Sl Rt 7 bypass ol Pomeroy OH1o Ex•t
at Pam1da Store on Laure Cl1ff Rd
'MOBILE HOME'
1997 New Yorker 14 x 65 2 bedroom 1 bath
V1w1ng day of auc110n or contact aucl10neer
740-949-2033
Owner- Small Bus1ness Bureau
Dan Smith· Auct1oneer Oh1o #1344
POSitive 10
Cash

ences &amp; Oepos11 Requ red 740

2 Bedroom Mobile Home Refer One bedroom apartment m M1d
ence s Requ ired No Pets Rent dleport a,ll utll ties pad $270 per
Plus Oeposrt 740 446 43t3 740 month $, 00 deposn call 740
992 7806
.446 0879
Small 2 Bedroom Mobile l~ ome tn
Porter Close To Stores &amp; Hosp

RIVER BEND PLACE
New Mav1n WV
ta l Tras h &amp; Wate• Pa •d $2351 1 Bedr oom apts lor elderly or
Mo $235 Depos t A.va table 511/ d sabted HUD ass•sted EOH
98 740 388-9325
304 882 3121

.9mall two bedroom mob te home Small ell1c1ency apartment u111
Jqr rent n Rae ne 740 992 5039
11es pa1d depos11 requ red 304
675 7783
Two bed room mo bil e home lor I:.;.::..:._:_::;__ _ _ _ _...:_
rent on New l•ma Ad 740 742 Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spac1 ous 2 Bedroom s 2
2603
Floors CA 1 112 Bath Fully Cat
peted Adu t Pool &amp; Baby Pool
440
Apartments
Pauo Start S3501Mo No Pets
for Rent
Lease Pl us Secunty Depos•t F\e
and 2 bedroom apartmenls lur qu red 614 446 3481 Even1ngs
740 446 0101 _ _.____
n shed and unfurmshed securny 1.:..;;:...::::.::.::.;_
depos 1 requ~red no pets 740 450
Furnished
992 2218

Buy $159 000

REEDSVILLE 1 lhru 5 acre lois land contracl ava•lable w•th
small down payment bordertng State Park and State Forest

Very secluded Ullllles available Just $10 000 and up

Bedroom Apanment Newes t
and Cleanes1 n the area near C ~r c le Motel Lowest Rates In
Holzer $279 Plus Utlhl es Oepos1 Town Newly Remode led HBO
and lease Req u red (740)446 - C.nemax Showt1me &amp; 01sney
Weekly Rates Or Monthl~ Rates
29S7

;aae

mn

Veh1cle w111 be sold at 7 00 P M w/reserve 1968
Chevy Malibu 4 dr auto a•r 307 eng•ne w1th
73 570 act m•les
AUCTION CONDUCTED By

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO
#66
Executnx • Ba,rbara Anne Roberts
Res 773-5785
Auct1on Centeo 773 5447
TERMS CASH OR CHECK WITH 10
Public Sale and Aucllon

HOWERY AUCTION
FURNITURE
SMALLS

ANTIQUE AND COLLECTIBLE SALE
Sunday, May 3, 1998, 11 00 a m at the
Howery Auction House on Rt. 50 &amp; 32, 6
FURNITURE Lg mahogany 3 door book case w•th
M1nerva heads &amp; claw feet oak bakers cabmets
miSSIOn oak Sideboards plus other Sideboard walnut
V1ctonan stand &amp; olhers sel of 4 Thorma Benl wood
chans 4 t1n p1e safes oak wash sland oak secretary
wardrobe mea sq table with round pedestal &amp; claw
feet extra n1ce set ol 4 pressback cha ~r s oak table
w•tn rope tw1st legs oak bOokcase flatwall cupboard
dressers stands 1ron beds oak ch•fforobe rocker
oak dep ch•na van~ty 50 s dmetle set &amp; mu ch more"'
MISC Early He1sey punch bowl th•slle pattern
p1c1ures frames blue &amp; 'white slone p•tcher stone
1ars 1ncludmg DonagghhO s pedal car old t•me
s«tch1ng mach•ne treadle sew•ng machine Gilbert #7
y, Erector set telescope co1n banks tobacco llns
Beer keg marked M1ller falls CAMERAS INCLUDING
NONLEY JB
RETINETIE I A BY KOOAK
BROWNIE TARGET SIX 20, BR OWN IE JR. SIX 20
KODAK STEREO #28, U N I TOPCON CROWN
GRAPHIC #9281 05 and much morel
ELECTRIC TRAINS &amp; MISC TRAIN RELATED
ITEMS Marx #666 490 1095 1666 21 999 400 &amp;
490 Amencan Flyer The Royal Blue #300 2165
302 Uonel #246 1061 1060 2033 1684 1130
Extra Transformers track bu1id1ngs 8. accessones fcor
layouts • RAILROAD RELAtED ITEMS Kerosene
caboose l1ght C&amp;O lantern w/clear globe N Y C
lanlern wlamber globe lanlern w/red globe B&amp;O 011
can , L&amp;N A R lock &amp; key Sargent C&amp;O brass lock
W W Co Lock Greal Northern &amp; Chess•e
Thermometers a1r brush &amp; more
NOTE RAILROAD TRAINS &amp; MISC IS ONLY THE
BEGINNING OF SEVERAL SALES FROM THIS
LARGE COL1..ECTION OF MANY YEARS
1st Sunday every monthf
Nice pie of aboul 3 - 4 hrs ,
good furnllure, trains &amp; mise
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
TERMS CASH OR CHECK W/POS I 0
AUCTIONEER RODNEY HOWERY
or 1-800-264-6390 or 740-594-3780

Sleeptng rooms Wit h cooking
Al&amp;o tra ler space on r1ver All
hQok ups Call alter 2 00 p m
304 773 5651 Mason WV

'4&lt;10-2563

WILLIAM ANN MOTEL

818 SECOND AVENUE

'

:1br apartment pnvate qu1et De

GALLIPOLIS

i!OSII References S2501mo 30&lt;
'675 1550

RUTLAND Well kepi 2 3 BR ranch 11/2 garage 2 lots

Located at the auct1on center on Rt 33 In
Mason, WV The Part1al Eslate of Velma M
Neal, 2407 Lincoln Ave • PI "leasant, WV,
has been moved to the aucl1on center m
Mason, WV, plus we w1ll also be selling
another part1al estate along with this one
(Very Partlpl Listing).

Construction Workers Welcome
740 441 5698 740 44, 5167

·1 Bedroom Apar1ment Stove Re
"' gerator Included No Pets 740 1--:_.:...;...;.._;.;.._ _ __

porch move 1n cond1t10n Muet See at $17 900

APRIL 28, 1998, 6:00 P.M.

RAILROAD PCS
TRAINS &amp; MISC

1 Bed room Apartme n t Hand•
capp-ed Ace Clean &amp; Ou•et
Close To Holze r Hos~ tal 740
9770

GALLI A COUNTY 3 Mn 1n a n ce subdiVISIOn Greal bu1ld1ng

POMEROY G•ea1 Pnce 3 BA plus loft large pnvate yard

TUES. EVENING

hardwood floors new carpet Covered porches $57,500

'bdrm apts

MANY LAND COliTRAOS TO CIIOOSE FROM JUST CAlL

8 Place wh ne wtektr pauo set
S2SO 2D-ple'e mul11 colored lor

App!lan cu
Recond •t•onei:l
Washers Dryers Ranges Retn

90 Day

Guaranreel
Frenc h Cuy ~aytag 7•0 441

7795

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washer s dryers relngerators
ranges Skagg1 Appliances 76
Vm't Street Call 740 446 7398
I 600-499 3&lt;99

Ret"'menl Sale Room S1ze Car
pet 112 Pt~t e Kitchen Prtnt $5 00
Sq Yd 740 44 6 7444 Moll ohan
CarpeL

MaJqu ls wedding ttl 1J2 C:lfll
size 1 pa1d 1
w11 1 take
11250 wedding gown with ve1l
"'" 7 I&gt;Old S700 Will 111\o $300
7.W.367.(12BB OJ 7&lt;60 e48 2481

s •oo

24ft long Pontoon boat w1extras •

Antiques

:NO Thtu 2 000 Gallons Ron
b1n1 Enr.rpwaea Jackaon OH

1-«10-5374528.

MTO 5hp rear tang tl11tr 1Zhp
38'" cut MTD lawn mower laddet
rack for lull ••ze ptck up truck,

Craftman 42 Uower , 4 HP En

304 811s.3053.

D"'" s•so 740-319-21110

Grubb"a P11no tumng I rePaua

Problems? Need Tuntd? C111 lhe
"'""" 0. 740-448-&lt;S25

8X8 Hea.vy duty utility uatler
road ready wlloading ramps 304

Hobart convection ovtn 1&amp;00 4
round ll.bl&amp;l &amp; cha1ra 1125 tech
a ~r hockey tabla $250 candy
Ytnd lng machme $350 m1sc
restaurant Hems 740 9&amp;2 4514
ask lor Chr1sune or leave mea

prage tire changer
wJba lancer Honda genera1or
304-675-1 137

675-6348

Atr eond1t10ner Condensing Umt

740-446 g358

A.ll Books 'For The Gener~l Con
trac tors Test Fof Tht West \11rg
n1a Contractors l•cenlt S250

(740)446-4423

Amnlng Uatabo Hsm Break
Through Lo1e tO to 200 lbs. Call
For free consullahon and Free
Safl"llleS (7&lt;0)441 - 1982
Are Your Looktng For Avon Pro
dvcta But Don 1 Know Where To
F1nd The m? Also II You Would
Llke To Sell Avon Call Pam AI

1

~~~ Dress SIZe 1o 740 245

Buy or se ll R1verme Ant1ques

Brand Newl Great G 111 CO/VIdeo
1, 24 E Main S1reet on Rt , 24 storage unit Black and cherry
Pome ro~ Hou rs M TW 10 00 Never ou t ol box S125 Holds up
am to 6 00 pm Sunda~ 1 00 to to 9~0 d scs also holds tapel
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ Call 740 992 6636 alter 6 ,:~m
Moore owner
COs &amp; mpes not ncluded

540 Mlscellarleous
Merchandise

Merchandise
Conc;rete &amp; Pla1ttc: SeptiC: Tanks

good cond

We Movedl Used Furntture Store
Below Th e Hoi day Inn In Kanau 740 245 5443
ga Oh o Beds Dressers CDuch
es Mattre sses Eel HrJ M T W
.:.:
10:.4:;.::11:;;4D;::)4~4j;::-4:.7:_:B2::;_____ . eeaut•lul M dmght Blue Sequen

530

540 MISC*IIaneoUI

-

New release TY Bean1n S9 50 2
Peace $35 each 740 992 S232
New TrailerS In Stock Sx8 Tih Bed
s., o Ttlt 1e·• t&amp; 1e·x18 Ft 740

448 81106 7&lt;0 444) 778 7

SPECIAL LOW
WEEKLY RATES
SINGLES$160 OOWEEKLY

tota l eleCwc ap

4aCIIitleS close Ia school

tn

town

•App11cat ons available at V11age Mobtle home site avatlab!e bet
;Green Apts 149 or call 740 992 !Neen Athens and Pom&amp;roy call

.3711 EOH

It He re It Is
Up On Your Avon
S~ m So Solt Molstufe Suncare
Plus To Orcter Ca ll Pam At 740

T1me To

I4251Ma S225 Deposn. Utthttea

YES!!
YOU CAN OWN YOUR OWN
HOME!!
In "Walnut Place" Syracuse

f'lid 740 .... 21211

S to~k

245 5443

NEW LISTING Syracuse One floor ranch beautiful home
com pletely remodeled move 1n cond1tton locateO on 1 4
acres Executive type home Call for an appmntme nt to

JET

see

Call Ron Evano HIOO 537 9528

SYRACUSE I 1/2 Slory home on a corner lol ol 175X1 00
3 bedrooms 1 balh LA DR k1 tchen w/oak cab1ne1S &amp;
appl Heat p ump &amp; elec lnc fu rnace a1r new s1d 1ng

Kmg Stze Waterbed lighted M r
ror Hutch Headboard Slorage 1
Drawers rPedestal Daytime U F
Q-5 740-~&lt;16

wtndows root w1nng plum b ng lnter1or •s 1n process of re
modeling owner w111 f1ntsh Pnce Reduced I

lawn Boy Mower With Gran
Catcher Runs Good $80 21 Nell

TUPPI'RS PLAINS Greal loahon' Jusl off SA 7 ThiS
p1cturesqu e sell g offers a stocked pond o n 6 acres m/1

lrtt Cha1r GoOd Workmg Condr

BR balh auached garage add! I bldg FREE GAS Pnce
reduced 10 $85 000 Talk lo us aboullh•s one

Avenue GaU1pol s.

large ltvtng rm w/fl replace large fam11y rm w/flreplace 2

non SISO 740 319-2720 AFTER
,~

..

POMEROY Th•s all racl •ve 2 slory 3 BR home w1th
approx 1400 sq ft on a more lhan a fourlh an acre 101
Localad on Lau•el Sl Own er says sell Call Us $25 000

Longerbe~ger

Baakell Some
J W Collectron Also Rettred

Ones. 740 4&lt;16-2222

Middleport
Beaut1ful two
story,

Bass1ne1
playpen
stroller Custom Alum Whee ls W I t lfet
sw ng walker h gh cha~r &amp; cc:.r 15· xr 4 112· Bo lt Center Fits
Ford &amp; Jeep l 1ke New New 12·
seat 875 4548
Concrete Blocks Clean On Pal
lets 740-446 9072.

2

3

bedroom,

bath, large hvmg
room

&amp; fam1ly

room Oak doors

- - - - - - - - - - Good Maple and Oak Hard Wood
Real Estate General Floonng Rad•o Shack Tv An
leMa l(l Bo• (740) 245-5887

and tnm Sm1th's

MORTON ROAD· 5 667 Acres By Survey,
IWoocled, Green Twp Washington Elementary
ISA•RA WINDS Acreage- D1vlded 2 lois
I f"••nt&lt;•n'Arv Road

IF.41&gt;1Rf'IELD CHURCH RD -Acreage w/road frontage
6 x 80 Clayton Mobile Home Very n1ce Lg
16x 32
INVESTMENT PROPERTY- 4 C1ty building lots
Apartments or Duplexes

Road Has barn but no house Worth much more th an the

ask1ng pnce of $72 000 Call us on lh1s one
TUPPERS PLAINS 2 Exira Large lots are a b•g lealure of
thts very mce home that has bee n remodeled w1th many
new features New Carpet New ce1lings New Drywall
New Wtrtng Plus other amen.t1e s ThiS home offers 3
bedrooms 1 bath LA OR Eat 1n k1 tchen uttltty area Heat
Pump ocated on a qut et street JUS! off SA 7 Must see thiS

cabinets, Jenn-a1r

COMMERCIAL AT KANAUGA
t&amp; J

Inventory t:and

BUIId~ngs

By appointment

992-5243

We Need Listings!
Property is selling. Call us today!

1-800-458-9990

Counlry

httpiiWh.apploJ.com

used express on? Come see for
vourself Great pr l vac~ w11hln
walkrng d1sta,nce to downtown 3
bedroom home 2 baths very neat
and clean E;a1 1n k tchen hv ng
room and anached 2 car garage
N•ce deck n ba c ~ Paved
dr veway Very n ce lor $79 900

i1::~~1)'11C1M

FAIRFIELD CENTENARY RD One acre more or less
Poss1tlle LAND CONTRACT

~~AM~

LISTINGS NEEDED- Ask about our Spnng Llstmg
Spec1al We have several qualified buyers

PO Am 61&lt; Rip1q1 WV 2l!71

HELP WITH PROPERTY TAX
ES?
II You Have 200 Or More Acres

6EAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
In Galha
Or Me•gs
Co 1Would
JIUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Be
lnteresred
In Leas1ng
The
!:STATES 52 W•llwood 0Jivo Huntmg R1ghta To Your Property

2 N• ce Bu •l dlngs Large

1nventory conslslmg of pumps mach1ne tools relays
plumbmg supplies hydraulic suppl1e s lndustnal supplies
hand tools seals gaskets bol ts nuts You name 1t we
have 1t large or small Call for an appOintment Ia see or
for more mtormat1on

Detached garage

""'"' the worlt wetk
.btlund you 1\!d&lt; up
j ,, '
the form~ and grt
away to your very
own log &lt;&gt;bin Or
hV&lt; ma IUJury log ";--.;:.:;
horne year IOWld (
CaD for our f.,. brochure or 104
I"!' SIUcolor "Wnc WIJh ftoor
plaru for ovor 611 modtl homa

aboul hall l•llable and hall woods Good Hunting Good

to apprec1a1el' Pnced 1nthe m1d 60 s Call us loday &amp; lei us
show you th•s property

Dishwasher,

TheMoment

31938 LASHER RD RUTLAND 92 acres m/1ol mce land

custom oak
Range,

740 385-4367

-.16 112 Secord Avenue Galllpo 470 Wanted to Rent
Jl• 2 Bedrooms AC Appliances,

Spr~ ng

Now That

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebulll In S1ook

jrllances lurnlshed laundry ••om 460 :;pace for Rent

DALE E TAYLOR (BROKER)
WALT TAYLOR (SALES ASSOCIATE (740) 44f.1!12t
FRANCES TAYLOR (SALES ASSOCIATE)7-3306
CAVE PARSONS (SALES ASSOCIATE) 740-882 11114
TOLL FREE 1 81111-812·5333

1235

~~r----===~=~~R:e:a:I~E:I~tl:t:e~G=e=n:e:ra:l::::=;::;:=..;._ _ _ _,

lr~m

$27g to $358 Walk 10 shop I Am A Responstble Sportsman
movlaa Call 740 446 2568 And Can Pay $,00 Or MOll Per
J:qUII Houmg Opporornlty_
Acre Per Year If Interested
Please Call Collect Bob Mays
lltard Now Aparunenl For Renl In 304 562 22&lt;9

ta.

If you &lt;~rc I ~red of paymg rent but feel you cannot
•fi ord Ia have ,, home ol your own you may be
miSt,,ken AI Rural Development we offer home
ownership loans wnh

•

Henry E Cleland Jr 992-2259

We re Selling Tlmell That s what

Alo Grande SJnglo Fomale Wan!

ed All Udhl1a1 lnduded Fra• Ca

'ble Free AC Par II~ Furnlahed

490

Y11 You Can Have

Shem L. Hart ..•.... 742-2357

For Lease

l:all AI 740 245-5100 &amp; Como Large store hntapac:;e lor lease
611 Ua For Interview 1 Block &amp; buelness for lease m Middle
pori Oh contact OWnet' Chnst ne
From ColleGe
740 902 &lt;514

NO DOWN PAYMENT

.

r

If
• you h tvu 1 "il •h ie und rchpblc mcomc that docs not
cxcc~.: d c1ur maximum hmlhi
• ynu h IVC 111 1Cccptahlc crcdll h1story

Real Estate General

£anaday ~
Realty

t

• \nur present dchts dt) not consume too great a poruon of
V(l llr lnC(lmC
• 'r tlu mm meet the Inan rct~Uircmcnts nf our agency

Model open with appointment.
Comes with view of
Ohio River

25 LOCUST 51:· GALLIPOUS
Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 446-3383

446-3636

HOME CREEK

INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY

ENTERPRISES

BEAUTIFUL PROPERTY LOCATED ON STATE
fiOUTE 588 COUNTRY SETIING JUST A FEW
MINUTES FROM THE CITY 8 RENTAL
UNITS, PRESENTLY FULLY OCCUPIED PLEASE
CALL SOON FOR MORE INFORMATION AND AN
APPOINTMENT TO VIEW THIS PROPERTY

1·800-536·1146
We have buyers looking for homes priced
from $30,000 to $110,000. Ust your horne.
now and let us do the work! In Meigs call
Shaula Laudernlllt 992·5054.

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, fenced yard, play gym,
ga zebo located 1n Cheshire Well cared
home 599-M $50 s
Watch Spring Unfold from the large front
p orch of th1s 3 BR, 1 5 bath home set among
thll trees on 3 3 acres 922 SR 681 1s pretty
as a picture for IUS! $84,000 577 -J

-

:$56 000 WILL BUY THIS LARGE TWO STORY
:litOME FEATURING FOYER WITH OPEN
•STAIRCASE 4 LARGE BEDROOMS LARGE EAT
:1N KITCHEN VINYL SIDING CONVENIENT
;LOCATION IN THE CITY

'
I

•PRICE BREAK NEW LOW PRICE IS $54 000 YOU
tCAN MOVE IN AND ENJOY THIS BEAUTIFUL
HOME LARGE LIVING ROOM FAMILY ROOM IN
BASEMENT AREA HAS FIREPLACE WITH WOOD
BURNING INSERT HEAT PUMP AIR COND NICE
:GARDEN AREA CALL SOON DON T BE THE
lONE SAYING I WISH I HAD BOUGHT THAT
'I HOME"
'

!
'

!VILLAGE OF RIO GRANDE WE JUST LISTED
:THIS PROPERTY LARGE 2 STORY HOME PLUS 1
:STORY HOME PLUS 2 BEDROOM MOBIL HOME
:ALL PRESENTLY RENTED NEAR UNIVERSITY OF
-RIO GRANDE CAMPUS ALL FOB "'n'n"1
•

266 US 33 Hardwood floors lhroughout th·S:
Immaculate 3-4 BR home on almost 3 acres~
Must see the 1ns1de $80's 547-0

•

Log Home w1th 3 bedrooms, 1 bath and 77'
aGres to call your own Please call for more'
tnformal1on Pnced tn the $120's 594-J

l-OOKING FOR A COZV HOME IN A CONVENIENT
t-OCATION? WE HAVE ONE! 3 BEDROOM RANCH
tiAS LARGE LIVING BOOM EAT IN KITCHEN
tiTIUTY ROOM CARPORt FENCED BACK YARD
lilAS FURNACE CENTRAL AIR COND FENCEtl
$ACKYAAD
•

to scnool$

11634 SR 7 S on appro x 1 2
acres this home 15 wa•ling lor you
fam11y to move In Offenng llv ng
room with fireplace remOdeled
k1tchen w th cozy breakfast nook
wonder1ul master bed room
plus 3 more bedrooms and a
playroom 2 1/2 baths and
garage A grat1W1ng home lor
$99 !100 1610
I

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191
Office. .. .. ... ... 992-2259
~
~

~=

Remodel ed olde r

house n good conO t on w th 3
bedrooms 2 baths fam ly room

and more Features a very deep
lot w lh an mground pool If Your
t1m e s mportant to you were
here to help" 111 30 000 1207

OO:;;n;iize

I Town
But
tlave Room for the
family when they vlslt? Then th e

PRICE REDUCEP- CHERRY RIDGE ROAONEW LISTING- IN THE COUNTRY- Near Approxlmalely 18 acres w1th remodeled 1 1/2
Chester Secluded sett•ng along SA 7 4 27± story frame home new double payne w1nd
Acres 14 x 70 Ul year old mob•le home m ows carpeVV1nyl floonng electnc baseboard
Grept cond1tton plus room add111ons for a heat Porch and deck aerator sept1c apphanc
tolalllvl~g space ol 1 36 7 sq ff plus porches es 3 bedrooms t 3/4 balhs Poss1ble free ga8
and a garage Large garden and room to available w11h Kramer Gas WAS $89 500
roam ASKING $54 800
REDUCED TO $78,500

br ck ran ch lot al eel at 1093
Sunset Or ve s lor you Oflet~ng 3
BAs LR/DA comb1na110n cozy
k fchen FR &amp; large re c room
remodel ed bath car port and
fenced yard All you need to do
w th th s home s move •n Pnccd
a1 $93 500 1600

Dlacrlmlnltlng Taelel! You w1ll

enJOY an ol the amen lies ot this Mare Th1n Meet• The Eye
executive home 4500 sq ft of 1here s a ot more house than you

quality llvrng space 11 rooms
featuung 4 B~s 3 112 beths
lormal LA &amp; OR and lorma l 2
entrance FA w1th a1tract1ve
and sun room 2
:~~~~i~; stereo and rntercom
m•o,ugr•out T1'11s beautiful
55 acres and
P.Oacelul pond with

I'I
PRICE REDUCEO· RACINE· Home ready to
move 1111o11 3 4 bedroom ranch lype homa w•th
lull
basemen! family room modern kitchen
NEW LISTING - IN THE COUNTRY·Ranch
heat
pump w•th cenlral a11 Wood burning
Type Home Wllh 3 bedrooms 1 1/2 baths lull
basement garage famtly room workshop furnace as a supplement Gas log I replaoe
W B F P deck porch paho large lol Evan a ptcntc shelter owner wants to sell"
reclucad to $59.500
BEAUTIFULLY LANDSCAPED GREAT
LOCATIONII GREAT HOMEI' ASKING
SYRACUSE· Gorgeous 2 Slory Home on a
$79,500
aouble IOI ThiS MajeStiC Home features 5
bedrooms 2 baths FA N G plus H P /C A
new shingle roof llreplace appliances
thoroughly carpeted Paved dnveway
•ncludea frame garage w1th upstalfS storage
area Home 1s very watl maintained and ol1ers
lull basement and an abundance or
closet/storage areas MUST SEE TO
R~•CII~E- So You Want a
APPAECIATEII Call Fot Appointment To See
Up Here You Gol' Two
with Th1s Oneil PRICE REOUCEO TO $1111.100
cenlral "" newer heat pum'p Front deck 14
x 60 older umt •n very good cond 111on SYRACUSE· Gorgeous 2 Story Home on a

2 baths, FANG plus H P/C A
new shingle ioof fireplace appliances
POMEROY One floor plan home w1th nice( thoroug~•lly carpeted Paved dnveway AIBO
corner lol Now a renlal @ $275 00/mlh Call Includes
garage wHh upslalrs s1orag1e1
lor an appointment ASKING $14,800 PRICE area Home Is very well maintained and ont&lt;al
REOUCEDtt
b11ement and an abundance ol
cloatl/atorage areas MUST SEE TO
APPRECIATE II Call For Appamtment ~-r ato.V ;..,.
Th1s Oneil PIIICE REOUCED TO

SHOULD BE LISTED WITH CLELAND REALTYttl

room /rec 100111 n liasem enr

Second kitch en 1n basement lor
enterta n ng and much much
more Outs de features mclude
Ia rge deck w1th gazebo brrck
pai!O w1th wa1er1a11 and a targe
separate gara ge/workshop n
add l •on lo a 2 car allached
garage Situated on 2 4 acres m
Spnngf eld Twp S217 000 1209

A Crowd Pleaser 11 67 Core
Mill Ro1d Oehghtlut nome w th
space for lamlly togeth erness as
we i as spac e l or pr~ va c y
seekers Th e kidS can cla•m tt)e
upsta•rs With open FR 3 B~s and
large bath The parents w11 1
apprec•ate the downsta•rs m~tste r
be droom sune w1th whirlpool tub
and walfl tn closet Everyone wtll
enJOY the LA 'fl!'l1h gas fireplace
FA and large open k lcM n and
d mng area L shaped fro nt porch
Qullil~
&amp;
Convenlenc:al That plus much
more 1s what ~ou 11 fllld when you
look at th s attract ive Cape Cod
hOme very n•cely ctecorated from
the oak kitc hen to the formal
d1n1ng room Ful l i.Msemen1
garage gas heat cen1ra1arr Low
maintenance ewter1or $59 900

Chii'IICitr

and back dec k ove11ook .ng a
fencec:t yard Dad w 11 apprectate
th e 2 car anached garage A
home i o fill you heart and famtly

needs priCed at $1 25 000 1805

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(740) 446-3644
E-Mail Address w1seman@zoomnet net

~

--

oPf'OATUN!TY

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
Loretta

M~Dade • 446-7729

Carolyn Wasch. 441·1007

Garnes 446-2707
\

basement 1ncluded there 15 4 140
sq h ' 4 bedrooms large hvmg
room ve ry n re kitchen formal
d•nmg oom large lanH iy

,~-~

have bought a new place and needs doable lot Th1s M&amp;Jesttc Home feattJres

BEI.IE~'I' lT OR NOTII WE KNOW BUYERS FOR MEIGS COUN1'Y PROPER1Yit IIAYBE

talkm over 4 000 square teet of
Yery n ce hv ng spacel W1th the

expans1on n the basemen t Well
kept bnck home wrth a lloor plan
that takes ful advantage of the
gorgeous r ver v ew IV ng room
din ng ro om eat m k1lchen and
fam ly room all have larg e
w1ndows 3 bedrooms 2 bath s
anolher bath m the basement
garage plus carport Th•s
can support a tam ly ol tus t a
coupl e Doth w11h comlon Large lot
approx 1 acre goes to nve1 1217

sell Should bnng $16 500 bul make offer

Two Story Homt or Apanment building 2 downatllrt l;lllrtrntllta that rent lor $475
Includes uthties Could be two apanmenta In the upetalrs or you COUld live there ""n'~a'l
potentl"l ls GREATII Owner may sell turn1ture at a price ASKING tea,OOO

A Lot Of House Hertl Were

m1gh t perceiVe from the road Th•s
home a so has lois ot room lor

I

sea.aoo

POMEROY· Two Story F~~~~t~
2 balha two wood b'
atoves plus
FA N G heat carpet/wood floormg Buement
has 1 balh and 2 exva rooms 1 car ga11ge
Would make a good rental IMMEDIATE
POSSESSIONtt ASKING 127,500

Lovely 3 BR 2 balh home set on 2 8 acres
2854 7 SR 143 Famtly r~om w/ftreplace an~~ 1
breakfast nook w/lots of natural hght
53 1 J

a convenrent locatmn w II save
All of Thla
you Great iocat on n town close

For Under 1100 000111 Located at

)vallable In June Or Julwo Pltan

1 to 6 3/4 Interest

V1 51t ou r. Web Slle at WWW athens-really com

740 992 2S&lt;a

113 c:aral, round diamond solllllre

aiZt e p11d saco w111 1a1w S550

1

s1d1ng new

pond pas tur e land barn outbutldtngs all tor only $50,000

AUCTION

•o·
G1b1on electn c ranfie good
condition lour year • old S37S

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Rooms

POMEROY 2 BR newly remodeled new roof close to town
and school Owner w 11f1nance Juet $27,500

DEXTER FARM 2 houses currenlly rented on 61 acres

$100 Hang ing celhng
19lt fl xrure $15 :'J:l~-875-30 1 3

540

r,

DEXTER ;J BR 2 story home basemen! roomy new s1d1ng
car port huge yard Bargain prtcod at $45 000

S1te Owner w1ll finance l•ttle down $12,000

ESTATE

Now Tak1ng Apphcauons 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apar~ments S295tMo 740 446
OOQ!j

36 7 ~3 2

LONG BOTTOM Terr ftC Value Beauhfu 4 BR 2 5 Bath Southern
charm home sung on 11 Acre m/1 stocked bass pone 2 BA Bunk
House mob! e hOme garage carport tree gas many extras GrWit

~ew

740 8 43

Mobile

272 East Second Street
Pomeroy OhiO 45769
(740) 992 5333
Weekly Feature

MIDDLEPORT 3 BR 2 slory lrame hOme

tn Pomero~

Req w ed 740 446 4345 After 6
PIA

·: - - -Home
- -Refer2 Beoroom

DALE E. TAYLOR REALTY

cha ~r s

grators

740 448-Q31l0

4410181

I 800 213 836S

Household
Goods
3exd oak dini ng room llble no

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

4

Th •s attract•ve home has 3 bedrooms liv1ng room
large tamliy room w/flreplace and skylights also walk
out pat o w•th french doors n~ce eat m kitchen 1 ca~
garage w/carport Stop by a let Cara show you th•slovely home Beallst•cally Pnced

510

ma t living reom set 12 500 304
675 5493

tras h •ncluded. 740-992 2167

bed ro om home on Pea r St
Mtdd eport $37 5 a month $3 75
def;x&gt;st 74 0 992 3t9-4

MERCHANDISE

$200 /Mo Deposit Requ tr ed 1 ry WV 1250 /mo plus deposit
Bedroom Apartment $2901Mo
304 675- 1371 or~ 675 3230
Uulrt••• Inclu ded 1 88B 8~0
0521
Mode rn 1 Bedroom Apartment

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$260 $300 sewer wa ttr and

S335Jmo -+ depostt 304 773

New- two bedroom nou se Ham
sonv I e area total electr c $325
per month plus u\llllliS deposns
requ•red no smok ng no pels
7110 742 3033

Apartments
for Rent

Jhnhag tt--Jl.ntit~al• Page DS

WV

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

440

House In Chester many updates
d&amp;Poslt leas.e rtftftnces are rt

3b r House n New Haven WV

Beautiful 3 pc waterfall B R su1te beautiful 9 pc
Bassett D R SUite 5 pc Art Decor d1nette set llatwall
cabinet 2 pc L R su11e reclin er metal bed coffee
table Lg selection of glassware hobnail m1lk glass
green depress1on salt &amp; pepper shakers cup &amp;
saucer sets Blue Willow bowls f1gunnes Fenton
silverware sheet mus•c 1930 s &amp; 40 s Sess•on clock
books pressure cooker Presto electnc gnddle fans
sweeper lawn furniture sr ovel step ladder 8. much
more

I

PUBLIC AUCTION

eeveral Home

Ca For Free Uaps + Owner F1
nanc ng Info Take 10% 011 L .sted
Pr~s On Cash P urchases~

WID Hoo k Up CIA No Smo~ers
Or Pets References &amp; Deposit

cy~(}! r;/mid

Public Sale and Auction

I

mterowave

Me i gs Co Oam1111e N1ce 17
Acres S1B 000 $2 000 Down ~
S2121Mo Ot9 Acte&amp;$t600 0
Wa1e1 Dye.sv lie N•ce 11 + Acr
es S10 500 1/ery Pnvate

2 Bedroom House In Gall polls

1998

410 Houses tor Rent

miles West of Athens, Oh1o

Public Sale and Auction

Cllbinet

Oalli1 Co Gall pol s Ne ghbor
hood Ad 10 Acre Build ng S te
Lars 0 1 Level $19 000 Or 22 Acr
es W• th Pond NOW $24 000
Fnend y A dge Last 21 6 5 Acres
$7 500 Ot 6 5 Acres $8 000 Bot/1
$15 000 County Waler

410 Houses for Rent

: Sunday, Aprll26,

1998

wmdows bo•ler heat1ng system great 1ocat1on $45 000

the
Gallia-Meigs
CAA is
looking . to purchase six
developed lots or land that can
be developed into six lots in
Meigs County. The land should
have all utilities available. The
land should have access
to
•
central sewage system. For
please
more
information
contact Samantha Rumley,
Housing Developer at 992·6629
•
or 367·7341.

Digital Imaging &amp; Videography

RENTALS

Public Sale and Auct1on

Public Sale and Auction
Saturday May 161h
Overbrook Center Will be havmg 1ts annual

740.U1 1492

SpeCial 16J80 3BR 2 ba lh

Ma~e

1995

1st T1me Buyers E Z F nanc ng
2 or 3 Bedroom Arouna $200 pc
mo nlh Call cred 1 hne 1 800

Sunday, Aprll26,

BRUNER LAND

Sale 8)1 Owntr Nice 3 B')droorn

Lea..e Message
4yrs old 4 bedrooms 2 112
baths fam1ly room m Meadow
broole Pnced In 130 1 304 67S

Mobile Homes
for Sale

WV

&lt;

�•

•

9

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
----------.
P.metoy Thrtft Shop naw bu~1ng
t~ra- outaldt tows and baby
hem., walkers toddler car seats

540

free movie c:hanneta, StarOne

apeclal, $41 lnatallallon 800
2132e40

Three ton heal pump, uaed very
&gt;nle $250, 740·949·3228

IN3725.
Prhne..ar. $99 tnstallatson wtth
$50 rebate F trat monlh lree with

01.111 Smoktng In Just Seven

Oaya Guaranteed! SmoM;e Awa'f
The natural way to qu11 smok1ng
eaatly and for good ! You ha ve
nommg to lose but your smok1ng

hablt! Order Now1 Nationally sold
at $1 19 95 Smok•Away PfOgram
11 now only $49 95 Money back
guarantee Call {800)61 1 5930
*-l775907e V1aaJ Mastercard

R &amp; S Furniture
Mlson,WV
Buy, Sell, Trade
Used &amp; Antiques

Furmture
304-713 53&lt;1 1

Scooters ElectriC Wheelcha1rs,
Sales Rental Trade New &amp;
uled, Bowman s Homecare 740

740 44&amp;-3658

3Games $150 740 245-9357

sota w11h matching rocker
love seat good cond1t10n
t200 lor both Healthnde r, ab
chair, dining room table W1lh 11ur
cha~rs sohd walnut coffee table
whh matching end tables call
7ol0 985-4306 belore noon
S~r

r~11ner

Small Compact Camcorder W1th
All E•trasl Pa1d $1 tOO W1ll Take
t550, Mans Hulfv B1ke A dden

T¥11&lt;0 175 ?40 446-7695
Smllh Corona Word Processor

W!lh Screen

Has lotus 3
Spreadsheets Hartl Or~ve And A
OIIC Or1ve More Features Call
Pim At 740 245 9635
WARM UP HIQh Eff1c1ency Natu
ral And LP Gas Furnaces L1fe

time Warranty On Heat E~echang
ftf ·u You Don t Call Us We Both

lou I· Free Est1mates! Add On

!-feat Pumps Only Shghty H1gher
Call Us Today 1998 Is Our 28th
~ear In The Heatmg &amp; Cooling
Butmess 740 446 6306, 1 800

3/4 200 PSI

$21 95 Pe' 100 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
press1on F1tt1ngs In Slock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES.
Jackson, OhiO, 1 800 537 9528

441 - 1419

labs AKC Grear Hunters, Great
Pets $225 Black, $325 Cho·
colate 740 25&amp;-6172
M1le Ronwe11er PUP. a w..ka old
sl)ota, vet checked, $100 7-40·

Block br~ck sewer p1pes wmd
ows hntels etc Claude W1nters
R1o Grande OH Call 740 245

Sell
S29 990
100x200x20 Was S9S 500 Sell

$69 990 1 800 406 5t2ti
560
Pets lor Sale
3 Year Full Blooded Border Co111e
W1th Papers , Male $150 740446- 3438

$125 :l:l4 937 2929

291 0098

1030 Case $3,950,310 G Case
Dozer $4 950 8250 $2,450 1365
Ohver $5,950, 740-286-6522
lic J&amp;Ck, excellent condnlon

$1,000 OBO :l:lo&amp;-6?5-31 67
1997 Ford 3930 4x4 Dual Remote Shuttle 45 HP, ,5 Hours,
loaded, L1ke New, 740.379·2748

NOTICE
Frtnch City P.t GroOfi'Ung
NowOpenl

b~ Appointme nts 650 Second A.ve

Professional Grooming

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Res1denual And Commerc1al
Lawn Equ1pment Compact Uuhry

Tractors From 20 To 39 HP All
Gallipoll• OH 740 446 1528
Stzes Ot 4 WO And 2 WD Farm
Tractors. Hay Equ1pmen1 1 John
Poodle pupptes teacup and tiny Deere Skid Steer loaders Check
loys AKC Reg1ttered, 740 687 Wtth Ua About F1nanc1n.g As Low
3404
As 2 9% On Lawn Tractors And
Two 8 Month Old Ballet Pupt, Low Rate Fmancmg On New And
AKC Reg111ered 740 367-7560, Used Equ 1pment Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lawn Galhpohs, OH 740·
Call Aher S 00 PM
446 24121-S00-594-1111

630

Llvest!'Ck

For lease

25¢ A Pound 304

8 N Ford farm tractor, exc cond

Purebted llmousH'l Cows, Calves
&amp; Hoilort, 740 388-0130

$3 400 Ford 16hp ndtng mower,
e:~c cond $1 ,000 304-6l5-3824

Registered Angus Bull. 2 Year5

Farmall Super M W1de Front
Power Steer1ng John Deera U
$3 500 Each, 740·3'79-8381

h~ rf"J~

'-"tva..,

':{. ·

r/J

.

~ B Q?~ ~
446•6806 ~ . eJ~

Maln Offlce . 388 8826

*

Branch OfflCB
23 L
1 51
OCUS

~;9~58~C~I~;,rk~~~R~~;o;ri~~~;ltlij,.,li,,S, Oh10

AKC Cocke r Span1el Black 1
LARGE BUILDINGS &amp;
Stacked Speed Queen Washer 1 While Female, 3 Years Old $100 ~
Home located on 10 acres
Dryer $450 Manuel Ho&amp;p~tal Bed Male s Months S75 740 256
or less B1dweu area 450
$550, Good Condition, 740 992 9350
frontage Some wOoded and
3225. Ahor 5 P.M
388-8826
:.:::.::.;--=....:..--=._____,J AKC Reg1s tered lab Retr ever,
REOUCEO on
!;TORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon Rady To Go May 1st, t Cho
Ad approx 7 1/2 Ac
Uptight Ron Evans Enterpnses, colare 1 Black Female 2 Black • ::c"·::_c or
2 112 Ac M/l
,.ckaon. Oh1o 1 800 537 9528
Males 740 379 2863
n ·,:·::~~ Also 5 Ac m/1 on
li.••ke\,;8\, Ct $23 400 VLS 446 ••
Real
Estate
General
•

Jii.os;aJLOTS

•

RegiStered Uorgan horse ma re
quarter horse gelding, 740 742
1050

67&gt;2098

640

Hay

• 71

Autos for 5ale

Truc:Q .tJI:"'A. Etc
1981 Buick LeSabre L1m1ted 1n
good cond $2,000 304·675

1295

va

Good ConditiOn, t1 ,900 Ot
Best Olfer 740 992 &lt;568

Oekalb Seed Corn Kay Farms
Call 304 675 1506 11 No Answer
leave Message

1988 O'Ddge Dynasty Very Good
Concht1on, PB, Automatte Trans·
m11s1on, POL. AC, FWD Very
Good Gas Mileage, $2 goo OBOJ
740 446-9780

TRANSPORTATION
Autos for Sale

Brakes New Tues 'Good Car.

740 245·51197

1975 Bu1ck Electra 225 Runs
Good $650 Restorable Call 740
446-4737 After 6 P:M

1992 Bu 1ck Regal Grand S~on.
80 542 m1les white w•th burgu~
lea ther mlertar auto. sunroof al
loy wt'leel~. ma)l:ed outl 740·949·

1978 ChEN S1auonwagon 60 000
Or1g1nal M11es, One Qwner Good

1992 Oodge Shadow 2 Doors 5
Sp&amp;ed, Alf Cond1t1onmg, 4 C11l10·
der Ercellent Condmon 740 388-

S~M

9803

e-mail us for !~formation on our listings:
blgbenlf@eurekanet.com

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

!lJv

Livestock

1 Red Registered l1mous1n Bull
740· 446·7380
2 Year Old F1Uy Reg1stered Pa1nt
Colt 740 446·,179

Oredtt Problems? We Can Help
Eas~ Bank F1nanctng For Used
V•h1cle1, No Turn Downs, CaU
VICkie, 740 44&amp;-28:17

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

Oh10 Valley Sank W1ll Offer For

RUSSELL D WOOD, BROKER

Salo A 1988 Toyota Camry
•bo4~90 Publoe AuCIIOn Will ee
Hold At T'he OVB AnnOK, 143
Third Ave , Galipolls, OH On 5121
9&amp; At 10 00 A M The Aboore W1ll
tie Seld To H1ghost Biddtr "As Ia

446-4618
J~dy DeWt1t

J Mernll Caner
Thmmte DeWHt

'

v

1141·0262
379-2184
245-0022

- :Where Is• Wilhour E•presaed
~~mpl1ed

VIRGINIA SMITH, 8ROKER . .... ...388 8821
EUNICE NIEHM ..........................-.11117
PATRICIA HAYS
., . ... .. Ul 3880
CARA CASEY ............................. 245-t430
WILMA WILLIAMSON
-2851
0 C FEREBEE

12008 AAMBUNG TAl-LEVEL
PERFECT
FOR
THE
4 BAs 2 112
EXECUTIVE ,
baths formal LR wtgas log stone
f1replace Formal DR Yery n1ce
cabinets In the knchen Huge

~~~~1Jy81 'U~~~ Amppr:Xa~t~Oo ~qA ~s

deck 1n the rear 2 car garage 1
ac MIL level lawn FREE GMS
Gall Vlrg1n.a for an appOintment
368·6806
12012 LOCATED ON SA
$35 COO
Can
VLS 368
8826/446 6806
12903
COMMERCIAL
OR
HOME 2nd Ave 4 BA 5 2 balhs
lg garage lot 52 174 "Great
t
locahon or an anttque shop or
otf1ce VLS $75 000
12110 History comea with thll
Turn -at-lha-Century Home
Great family home and bus~ness
location on 3rd Ave 3 bedrooms,
1 1f2 baths p basement
HandiCap ramp V1rg1n1a L Sm1!h

388·8626
1¥2056 Vacant corner lot 1 acre •
more or less Porter area Trees
and flat $25 000 oo VLS 388
6826
12034 EXCEPTIONALLY smart
ranch 3 Bedrooms oak cabinets
In a large kitChen t l-!2 baths 6
acres mil VLS
~35 L•ke new 3/4 bedroom
ranch home l•vely f1vmg room
huge kitchen, w1th cabinets galore
ttnrshed basement 2 car garage
$92 COO VLS
1207· Acreage for nun11ng or to
bUild a new hOme on A10 Grand
area Call Wtlma 446 2851
12112· Investment propertv 2
mobile homes with room for
another all on 3 acres mil Call
W1lma or 0 C 446 2851
12901 Great buildmg s1te With

.. . . ..

.-.2851

12137 EXTRAORDINARY 5
bt1droom located In Green Twp 2
story w/many amenities Instantly
appealing for a growing tam1ty 2
1/2 baths, formal d1n1ng &amp; living
rm f1reptace 1fl LR full d1v1ded &amp;
llnlshed basement Vacant Pnced
to sell Call VLS 388-B826
11078 IN TOWN 3 BR 1 bath
large k1tchen w!nlce eab1nets, HW
floors gas heat, mce flat lot VLS
446 6806/388 8826

l!~.:t:~l

Zl&lt;t $ PACIOUS QUALITY
CONSTRUCTED HOME ltaloan
foyer cathedral ce111ngs balcony
abo\18 the LA wtlog f1rep1ace,
equ 1p kit, breakfast rm, w/bay
Window stereo throughout, brass
light fixtures 2 car garage, an1c
storage, screened back porch
much more New roof Home 1s
maintenance free Call VLS 388
B626 S149 COO
1

QUA I L I TV
Brand new home
ready to occupy' 2 Story
coloma! home bUll! w1lh Jhe
fam11y '" m1nd 4 bedrooms
wtth walk tn close1s., 2 1/2
ba1hs (master ba1h comple1e
w1th wh1rlpool tub) foyer.
ltvtng room k1tchen, d1nlng
room Heat pump attached 2
car garage basement Low
matntenance Ftat over 2
acre lo1 C11y schools Le1 us
Jell you about the rest C11y
schoolsl#997
Q

$85,000 Lots of character,
llvtng room, dtntng room , 4

bedrooms 2 ba1hs, 1o1s of
closets Close 10 school and
walking dis1ance 10 s1ores and
park lmmedle1e possess•on l
Owner wan1s an offer! #971

12 o1B NEW 1818 Sunshl[le
16 x80 outstanding mobile home
with a deck spec•al cabmets
WindOWS and 'bUill 10 muSIC
center 3 SA 2 baths. beaullful 11
ac m/1 Close to town VLS 388

8626 554 COO

Warr&amp;nlf And May Be
..,..,n 8y Calling KBith Johnaon At
7~0·441 ·1038 OVB Ruorveo
Tho Right To Ae&lt;apt Or Reloct
Al1)' And All Bodo, And Withdraw
Pioperty From Sale Pnor To Sele
Terms Of Selo CASH OR CER·
TII'IED CHECK.

LESS ...come newer fencing,
36' x 40' barn Water and
electrtc lntac1, tobacco
allotmen1 Mostly all acreage
tn wooded wtth a small amount
t1llable Purchase w11h or
without 3 bedroom home

AFFORDABLE RANCH W11h
lots of upda1es such as
hewer heal pump, vmyl
s1d1ng , shtngle roof, wtndows
&amp; more 3 bedrooms llv1ng
room, attached ~ car garage
Green Elementary/GAHS

S.1Zed Cats From S1 75 Porsch

•I

Cad1llacs. Chevys, BMW's,

CQrveues Also Jeeps 4

wo·s

V!ur Area Toll Froo 1 800 218

~poo Ext A-2814 For Current
L•ti"GS

Real
ALL THAT GLmERSI
extras Sleal lhe show in lhis
3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath home
wl1h personahty to spare!
Decorator
touches
1hroughou1 Sphl plan, very
spacfous fam11y room
Almost 5 acres With fenctng
&amp; barn •deal for a couple
horses Slacked pond
Close 1o R1o Grande, c11y
school Loads morell983

wheels &amp; rad1ato rs 0 &amp; R Au to

1g94 Ford F·150 XLT
loaded, es.oo milea '
114 ;g5 cau 304-1175·8281 after
1995 Dodge Dtelll 4WD loaded,
83,00p IC:Iual mllaa, e11cellent
condllon, $22,000 l~rm call 740.
992-69110

720 Trucks lor Sale

b&lt;Jmpers $2 750 814-446·381&lt;

98 Toyota Tacoma, 8,000 m1lt1,
740 742 2803

1988 Kawaoaki 650 Jol ak1, 2

740

1991 S 10 A1r Clean 740 · 446

1981 CB 650cc 4Cyl Honda road
b&lt;ke, good cond $900 Call K&amp;K
Mob1to HOI)10S, Sam 5pm 804·
675-3000

1994 GMC ExtencR!d Cab, e11c&amp;l
lonl CDndlbon, 740 949-3088
1993 Dodge 0150 Club Cob h1gh
m11es. $8250, 740·992-6154
1997 Ford Rangar XLT 4cyl,
5spd 8,600fmtles, Tonneau cov
e1, ec, ps, exc cond 304·882·
2962 even1ngs.
Factory s tO \Yhoe;s (7401 'A•t1419
730

Vans

i 90hp Met"UIItf lhboard motor,
Wl1h rra1ler, life preservers &amp;

3893

2357 ·
7318

Motorcycles

seater With trailer $800

:114·852·3566

or 080

1992 Cob1a Runabout t? H2 Ft
Wltl"' Trailer lots Of E•trasl Like
New, S8.ooo 740 446 4782, Golh
poliS, Ohia

1982 ford F250 4M4 6cyl 304
675 1202

4P.M

1993 SUzuki GSX800R, Uka New
low M1leage Call 740 - 446~4737
A~er 6 P.M

Steel Tra1ter, Daytime 9 5 M F

w1th 3 bedroom ranch home large

InformatiOn

121&amp;e NEW ON THE MARKET,
JUSt m1nutes from town lovely area
3 bedroom ranch with 2 car garage
w1lh n1ce large lot
12963- PRIME HUNTING LAND,
owner amuous to sell 70 acres
great places tor bulld1ng also, call
W1lma or 0 C lor full detailS
112930- FANTASTIC VIEW, IS what
you II have w1th 1h1s 3 bedroom
doublew1de on 13 acres w•th large
barn, some fence, Wilma or 0 C
12t34· JACKSON PIKE AREA,
lo11ely brick w1th naw kitchen with
lots of other updates large lot
W1lmaorOC
12t61· LOVELY HOME WITH
COUNTRY UVING. 3 BR 2 bath
2 car garage w1th acreage, W11ma
or 0 C
12941- RIO GRANDE AREA, 3 BR
ranch wuh 5 acres only $65 000

MIODLEPORT· North 51h Ave A 2 story house compteJety
redone and looks new upsta1rs and a large hvtng room w1th
newer carpet d1mng room front porch large u1thty room and
k1tchen REDUCEO TO S22,DDD
JIVIDEN HOLLOW RO • Approx 20 acres of vacan1 wooded
land Very secluded and has free gas and royat11es Has
several building s11es $15,DDD
RACINE· Th~rd S1ree1 Th1s prope~ could make you money
Has 4 un1ts Wtth one apartment upstairS w1th 3 bedrooms
one apartment downstairs wi th one bedroom and 2 other
units could be storefront bus1nesses or turn them mto
apanmen1s $52,500

12973 NICE TILLABLE LAND,
13 acres m all w1th a 16 x 80
mbblle home With lots of room tor

RAINBOW RIDGE· Beau11fuJ f1eld w1th approx 7 acres
place to build
home or put a mob1le home Water
11

MIDDLEPORT· An older one story home thai needs lo be
1om down but s1111ng on a lot approXlmalely 50 • 100 A
p11ce for your mob1le home $8,000
KINGSBERRY ROAD· Wa111111 you take a look at 1h1S onell A
4 bedroom hemp w11h 2 3/4 ba1hs and has an open s1a1rway
cathedral ce11lng 1n 1he l1v1ng room Less lhan one year
and s1tt1ng on approx 2 acres of secluded land $97,500
DOTTIE TURNER, Broker ..........................992-5892
JI!RRY SPRADLING ................................. 949-2131
CHARMELE SPRADUNG...........................949·2131
It liT' JO COWNS .................. :. ............... 949-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS ..................................... 992· 1444
OFFICE ................................... .................. 992·2886

orOC
12,70 READY FOR A NEW
FARMER, 85 acres w11h 3 BA
house, large pond Patnot area
call Wilma or Q.C

W&amp;lmaorOC

MIOOLEPORT· A 1 1/2 s1ory bnck home w1th a newer
addllton· Has 3 bedrooms 2 1/3 ba1hs newer rear porch and
some newer w1nng Has a small par11y lenced back yard
Need work $14,000

LAUREL CLIFF Rl).. Approx 11 acres w1th a pond 28 K 60
Pole Bar~ and a 1992 mobile home w1th 2 bedrooms Jhat1s
eppt'OK 5 years old and Is 14 x 60 Agent owned $45,DDD

every day, this Is a campers
parad•se 2 acres with a 2 BR
mob1le home with 3 outbulldmgs,
priCed to seU al $28,000 00 Wilma

aa the kids or •n law9 W1lrfl.8/0 C

12,35 WAITING FOR A
BARGAIN? HERE IT ISII Heros
a ranch style JU&amp;I for ~oul 2
bedroom , 1 batn, lg living rm
w fl~teplace , OR mce ,deck, l car
garage w/storage Don't wa1t
S35 000 00 Call cara
f2t8.4 JUST- THE PLACE FOR
YOUR FAMILY TO CALL
HOMEII Here •s a 1 1/2 story
home w1th 3 bedroom, 1 bath,
hvlng rm dtnlng rm , HW floors,
eat m k1l chen, CIA. basement,
storage bulld•ng, 32 ~ acre mJI

12152· HOME IS WHERE THE
DEER RO.\M, 10 th1s 5 BA w1th 10
acres, large outbUIIdmg 1n the RIO
Grande area, Wilma or 0 C
12801 THE ANSWER TO A
BARGAINII 3 bedrooms, 2 bath,
eat·ln kitchen, HPtCA lg LA, nice
OR, 1 car garage detacfled good
buy at $55,000 00 Better call
today before lh•s one get's away
Call Cara
12151 PRICED TO A QUICK
SALEII 3 bedroom 1 b!1th, hvlng
rm, 20 x 25 famtly room w/skyhghts
and f1reptace eat m kitchen loft, 1
car garage wtcarpon Make your
offer must sell Call Cara

121120 TAKE THE LANDLORD
OFF YOUR PAYROLLU 3
bedroom 1 bath hvlng roQm
wtf1rep1ace nrce eat-in Tutchen,
CO\Iered patio, sitt1ng on 1 acre m/1,
someth1ng spec•at see th11 one
todav Of Call Cans

12117 OON'T DREAM A
DREAM.. BUY ONEil 3 bedrooms,
2 bath hvlng rm , wtFP eat 1n
k1lchen, Utll1ly rm CIA large 21evet
deck, 28 ft rd pool, StQrage
Call Cara,IPatty
t1034 50 Acre1 mtl of prime building slnmg on 1 acre mJJ Get
development land E~~:ceuent for 1n touch with Cara today
developmenl or commercial Use 12883. Brick R•nch w/3-.t BR's on
Call Patncl8 Hays 446 6806
SR 7 2 1u11 baths beaut•ful stone
12191 OWNER WANTS THIS FP 1n LR &amp; FA, large kllch
HOME
SOLO .
PRICE w/dlsposal, range, d1shw, b1rch
REDU~EO Ranch . home w/3 CBblnetl DR, den 2 C garg wng
BA's &amp; &lt;5 ba1hs Approx 2343 storage rm , adp1n.ng ~ot wfJ2 x3'2
sq h Built In ch•na cabinet &amp; pole barn $240 OOQ Call Parrlcla
book shelves In LA Beautiful M Hays 446 3884
l kit,ohelnw/new counter tops 12004 look1ng for the per1ect place
, refng 2 car garg to set your tra11er or to build your
=~~~~~~~ area shed 24x24 new h0ma1 Here il 11! Vacant lOt
w/elec &amp; phOne Much
$149,900 Call Patnc1a M with 2 rQad frontages! Call Patricia
M Hays 446 3884
446-3884

I

ranch style nome Is a good staner
home aocated In Rio Grande Area
2 bedroom, 1 bath, l1v1ng room,
ealln .kitchen, setting on 1 acre
rn/1 Bener dnve ovar and see th11
one tOd'y or call Cara for your

pnvale showing. $35,000
IUI2 FIVE .ACRES
PARAOISEII Looking for a
IOCahon we gor the pTace 5
mil beautiful home. sogh1 w/112
aero alockOd pond, with plenty of
road frontage. Stop by and take a
I0&lt;5k Call C.ra/Pattv.

12tll MtNIATUliE FAIIMII
Aanch Stylo home 3 BR, 1 5 balh.
LR w/FP skylights office/den
w/WB, ea1-1n kit, basement, ulil
rm de&lt;:k, Smith 1 cab1nets, 24x
24 carpon, 24x36 blm E&gt;&lt;colltnl
bargain Better c:all Pany/Cara
nghiBW8)'

12• Brick Ranch W'/flnistntd

&amp;IIIC on SR 588 Ci1Y schoola, 4
BR's, 2- full baths Full basement
N1ce covered front pc)f'Ch $59,900
f1rm Call Patr1cla M Ha~ 448J
3664
12921 Price ROdueod to 179,900
3 BA 2 baths on Debbie Dr
ApproJt: 2 000 sq ft , has a 30
year

shingle

roof.

Green

EleoriGAHS Clll Patncla Hoyo or
Cara casey
• 2941SeeiB
Prlc;oo~:t~J~!~;

Riploy, WV 304·372 3933 or 1· 1891 Fleetwogd Bounder Motor
800 273-9329
Home 34 Low M1lea, Piit1o Aw,..
1ng. Chny Chan11 With _.54
WANTED TO 8UY
1968 Molar 2 Coleman Roof AC 13 5
Through 1972 Chevollo Or Elca- BTU Each. Sustained Moderate
mmo Conso le Can Also Be A Body Oalfl#ge, Formal Repair Es·
1970 Through 1972 Monte Carlo llmale On File, Asktng $26 CXIO
Console '"MUST BE HORSHUE For More Information Call Chris
SHIFTER TYPE- Phono 740 Ervon At 740·441 ·30!0
441 1053

c Wood, Broker • 446-4523

1985 Jeep 'Cheo,kee. Good Con·
•

SERVICES

mobile home repair and more Fot~~"
free estimate CIU Cn&amp;t, 74o-P82·.
8323

'·

Tamrnlf'l Constructkm.lnc.

810

Far aU your building nelda..
Carpentl)' Frarmng trod

Home
Improvements

,~
11

•

rwush carpentr~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncandlttonalltfeume guarantee
local references furmshed Es ~

R'ooflng Paln•ng, Orywal,
Plumbing and Electncal
For dOcks, acldloons, roha~l.
etc

74Q.8t2-6:187
Semor C1DZen Discount~.

840

Appl•,.nce Parts And ServiCe All
Name e.anda Over 25 Years Ex·

per1ence All Work Guaranteed.
French Ctty Maytag 740·446·
7795

,'

For I frN tMimatl caU:

tabilsned 1975 Call (740) &lt;46
0870 Or 1·800 287-0576 Rogers
Waterprool~r~g

: ••

Electrical and
Refrigeration

"'

, ,.

,,

Aes1denflal or commerctal wtrinQ.
new serv1ce or repairs Master ll·
censed electm lan Ridenour
Etectncal, W\1000308 30 .. ·875·

17118

LINERS THAT
'
FIT.

45631

•More than 30 trend·setting patterns
•Computenzed layout and cut
.Continuous seal beading
· •Comprehensive pool safety tnfo 1ncluded
with every hner

114{1.. 3 bedroom home located on Second Avo In Gathpohs Call

Speed $3.000, 740 446 4737 Af.

ooallt or 2 $450 30Ha2·3273.

&lt;

C&amp;C General Home M1ln
1anance Pa 1n11ng, v1nyl sldiPG 11
carpentr~. doors, windOWS, blltl~~

ABOVEGROUNDANDINGROUND
.

-

•

d1Uon, While, .108,000 M•les, 5

8ella1re truck c;mper, 811 long,
ulf contamed, gaod cond
$1,800 Sleeper tor pick-up,

Home
Improvements

740·446-9418

Ken Morgan, Broke!· 446-0971
Tim Watson 256-6102
Jaanelte MOille,· 256-1745
PalftCia Boss ~
740-446-1064 or 1-80().894.1068
~

1983 Chevrolet • WO, $2,500,
740 379-2366

810

X2 1992 SeaOooa. Wllh Double

1o!-more Information •

1987 Plymouth Voyager 80,000
On Rebutlt Eng1ne Many New
Pans Excelltnt Cond111on 740·
367 0514, 740 367 7242

"
MAIN,ENANCE

1988 Ford Van W11h Wheel Chait
l1h, New Tires New Banery, Automauc A~r, $6,500 F1rm, 7ol0·
446 2134 leave Message

1988 GMC S 15 4x4, New En01ne

•Commercial
•Residential
•Weekly
•Bi Weekly
•Monthly

1147· GREEN SCHOOL O)STRICT 3 bedrooms· 2 balh· full
basement w11h niCe lot

New Pamt Job Excellent Cond1·
t10n 740..t46-8603

•

t989 F·150 •••. 5 speod, 302
oho&lt;t bad, AIC toolbox, Amerocan
Rac1ng Wheelo, $3500, 304· 773·
5039

•Pumps
•Filters
•Solar Systems
•Heaters
•Safety Covers
•AutomatJX: Sweeps

THANK YOU TRI-COUNTY RESIDENTS

Estate General

we~ve been designing~ building and maintaining

11 ... Spacious home ovorlook1ng bla1utiful
on aj)pl'ox 5 4 acre!l Ca11 abOut this one

your pools for almost 20 years!

I20I)g. P~cl

•
"

Haollaln Radu-1o 112310000011 on thla IOAcre
Tract of Lend, w1ttf approx 9 acres wooded, Uti! available,
mine~~~~ t1ghts

•

12001 Call to get more details on this lot. size Is approx 100
80 located m Plantz Subdivision

:

1·800-894-6997

The

GALLIJ.?OLIS

1412 Eastern Ave.· 4466579 • 24 Hours

14002· Two bedroom Moblte Home sttuatec! on 150 acres mJI
loca1ed on S A 7 South

•
:

•

-------..:.-

f500t. PRICED REDUCED- great Investment opponunity· 3 one
bedroom apts· a 2 bedroom mob1le hOme easy td rent check on

this property

191,16

11001- Commtrclll Property· In Town. Loca11on. Comm Bldg,
Apt· Bldg, 2 houses G~ an tour for one price! Call tor more
lnformatlon

JACKSON

•

•

HOURS: MON.-SAT. 9 :()().~:00

384. East Main· 286·1553
Never~ Never Swim Alone

1201,.. Residential Lo1(s)ln Gallipolis
1141 Home located In city schools, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, ranch
home

E
RANCHER w1th exira room
1ns1de &amp; oul Over 3 9 acres
approx 3·4 bedrooms, family
room, hvlng room , formal
d1nlng &amp; loads more Attached
2 car garage &amp; de1ached 2 car
garage $59,900 1989

secluSIOn 3 acres m/1 Call W1lma

barns and other outbu!ldmgs call
W1tma or 0 C for afl the

1984 V.llow Stone Camper, 35', 2
expando 1 , lull alza bedroom
(qu- size bad), tun OIZO 1rmg &amp;
kuchen, new lull s12a &amp;tDve &amp; ref ,
new carp•t, vinyl, au window•
have cu1tom Klnh bllnds!Lambergay must au to appreciate,
aerlou1 tills only, $8500, 7_.0992 6173, 740-992·2015.

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1995 Potan1 Sl 750 Water Craft

Wilma

r.!925 If farmmg 1s what you are In
the market tor th1s 1s 1t 280 acres
m/1 that Will sun your laney w1th 2
homes and a mob1le home pad
barns tree gas and a pnvate
tandmg stnp Wilma or 0 C
12,211- GREAT PASTURE LAND

1;72 28 &amp;elf Contained Camper
Good Shapo, It 600. ?40·245·
9448

790

W1th Tratlttf, 740 448 7498 Alter

1991 Honda 250x 4 Whee l81 Loti
Of E•.. sl740 441-1419

Allen

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

790

1990 Eddie 15' 1980 Fleetwong
17' Awning, 1975 Mallard 27
Awning , 11H2 Aristocrat 20' ,
1185 Chrysler New Vorlwr 4 Cy
Iinder, Turbo, U180 Sob McCor·
New gas tanks, 1 ton truck mlck 740-446·1511. Galhpoh~

WOOD
BEJUTJ', INC
32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

&amp; 4-WDs

terSP M

Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

1997 Ford F250 XL 4•4 304-882·

l18,g~s

o4i14,

Ava11atie 304 458-1069

750

199&amp; Ford Wlndatar 31,000
Mdoa, AC, PS. Pl Cruise CasNile, Til~ $15,?00 740-4&lt;11-Q108

t995 C1w&lt;y Blaur LT •dr, • x4,
leather, load•d. 45,000 mll81

Upton Used Cara Rt 62-3 M1le1
South of leon , WV Ftnanc 1ng

Motorcycles

1991 v.maht Kodlac 4xC E•ctl·
lenl Condldon $4,500 700.258 KIWIIIki STS Jet skJ, sl!ll under
warranty lhree aeatet 83 horse
t993l_M.._
power bought new Ju ly ol 97,
Suzuki 250 • Wheeler Racks three matching Kawuak1 sk i
Front &amp; s,ck, S1,450 700·379- Velll and U~fel all go With II
$5000, '140•949·2203 ,.., 740-949
2366
2045, Will conSider tr11ode for a
good ponbon boat
750 Boals &amp; Motors
for 5ale
MFG 17 112tt: lrvout board, 140hp
19 Fl Crealllner Cuny Cabin, -4 mercru 1ser, V-haul , walk ttiru
Cyhnder, Mercury Cru1se, Inboard w.ndshleld. open bow, all com
Outboard Engine, Lots 01 E•tras l plete covers &amp; trailer $3 500
Goo&lt;l Lalit Ena Boa~ Good Con 304 662·2326
dtiOn, S3,COO OBO 740-368·9665
760
Auto Parts &amp;
1969 Sea Imp 19 1121t doop V.
Accessories
be 1ge wtsand 1nter1or Gcyl

llpm

l2811 HISTORICAL SPEAKING

charm1ng Victorian home 4·5
bedrms 3 baths k•l formal OR &amp;
LR
Crystal chandeliers
throughout full bsmt with
complete kit, olone WBFP BR
w/ gas f1replace garage
landscaped lot Exclusive viewing
with VIrginia l Smith 446-8806
1873 PRfME DEVELOPMENT
LAND 117 Ac M/L Close to
treeway &amp; hospital Old home and
barn Gall1a Co Vt.S
Ut51· OWNER WANTS A
QUICK SALE so hurry and take
a peek at th1S one, newer 3 BR
ranch wit/1 briCk front In the Crown

. 740

11,500. Dayo 304·1715-1;32 or
overingoJ04.995'lC!t5.

1;93 Ford Eocort LX Only 26.000
M1181, Au to, AUJ FM Calle tte'
AC Excol lont Condouon, $5,400
OBO Call 740 9118-3016

1995 Chrysler Concord 68 000
Milos. Loaded, $8,500 080, 740.
251H!Ii!ll

Bad Credit, No Credit Bankrupt
c:Y? We Can Help! Bank Finane
mg On Used Vehicles 7-40 4.t1 0807
•

&amp; 4-WDs

ttgo Ford F·150 V·4 air, fm.c01•

.,..L

1991 GMC Sonoma PICkup, 4 cy·
Hnder 5 speed 85,000 m11es, •• :
cenent cond1110n $3000, 740· 742·

1996 Neon Green 4 Doors. Au1o,
AC, 31,000 Mll&amp;S, $7,200 OBO
740 256-6340 74Q.258-ll487

van•

Mrte, 4U new tlret, 41 1ilt kit

opeed. $3,000, ?40 9•9 2311
days, 740,94g.2644

1984 Dodge Ram 1oo good work
!ruCk. 304·882·2669

1998 Monte Carlo LS llko Now.
PW, POL, CO Player, Tinted
Wlndowa. Cellular Phone Hook
Up, $1Z500, 70251H1347

Real Estate General

ber 3K loot lor $750 ?40·949·
3011

730

1993 Ford Tempo, 4 Doors, PS,
P8, Alf, Automatic, Trade Or
$3,4115; 740.2oi!Hi877

1996 Chrysler Concord 29 300
mila•, leather tntertor loaded,
askmg pay oil pr1ce 0111 G04·
615- t932 or avenlngs3d4 895
JetS

2311 day• 740949 2ti44

Cond111on, 740 446 9072 9 AM

Autos for Sale

'87 Oodgo , 2 ton 318 lair condl·
uorl, StOOO 740 742 2420

1988 Plymouth Sundance New

71 0

710

door, amflm custne, air, 5

1891 Sundance Convertible All
Opt1ona 8g,OOO M,Jos $3,295 ,
1086 Chevy Truck V8 Auto
84 COO Moles $2,100 Cook Mo1ors
(740)406-{)103
•

1982 Cutlasa Supreme, 2 0 280

100 bags Oekalb 460 Round up
Ready St:1'f beans. 304-675-1506

tor Sale

t98g Dodge Daytona. 100 ooo
mtlel, runt good needs minor r&amp;paors, $2,000, 740·992·5559
:;.;199;;.:.:1..:Pa..:n..:na..:c.:..:.SU_n_:bO_:r,:,d..:G.:;:T:.:L;.oa_ded-·1
v.a CD. Red Alum Wheol• o-·
~
•~
Owner, New Alternator, 7.-0·37e·
2748

t 800 522 27:11 X 3901

&amp; Fertilizer

Autos

304--175-1310

locallyThs Month.

Message

o

t;ag Cavalier 20 4 Cy11ndao ,1992 Toyota CtN&gt;Ila, ;2,000
Auto, Air, Hlgn M1lea , $1 ,500 , mltea. maroon Wlth gr1y '""""'· 4

1980 1990TrudcsForS100111
Sezod And Sold

&amp; Grain

Tobaceo Plants For Sate, Re·
ser~e For May Planung Danny
Dewhurl\ 304'-895 3789 Leave

650 'Seed

o

1978 Delta 88 Oldsmobile good
cond 304 773-5492

Reg11teted black Angus
•bulls 13 &amp; 15 months of age 304·

1989 Ca mara AS, mus t sell
$2000 740 742 2820

Ol1ver 550 good cond1tion, eouip·
men! plow diSC, bilde, brush hog,
2 tra1lers, all 1n good 10 poor condillon all lor "K alsQ rough lum

630

71

Livestock •

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

850
Older 2 sty 4 bedrms 1 bath 3
acres 0111 plus a large barn

205 North Second Ave.
lecort. OH

Old Gentl6, 7•0·367·7224

New Helland 478 7h haw- b10e wl
stuD guatds cy11nder .&amp; manual,
exc cond 3:14-273-4215

"r__________;...__________.;.._________-w

A Groom Shop Pet Groom mg
Featuflng Hvd'o Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad
740 446 023 1

Adult male Dalmat1an good per
sonal•ty good for stud serv1ce

610 Farm Equipment

992-2665

5121

$49 990

Ford 800, Ford e•1. Ford 881

even~nga

14' John Deere disc With hydrau-

Building
Supplies

Steel Bu1ld1ngs New Mus t Sell
40x60x14 Was $16 200 Sell
$9 990 50J100~e16 was $26 550
Sell $18 990 60xt50x16 Was

price or 11ud service,

304·JI63.8351

Brandy and Teek 1e Phone {7.:10)

675 8040

Steel Bu1ld1ng D&amp;alershiP!t 10 se
leer open markets Huge profit
potent1al Call Mr Uoon1e 304
758 4135

630

__u_n~d-T-oba~c-co~At-lo-tm~en~t·l fwo
W::-a-n-te-d:-.-m-a:-lt--:-A-Ir:_td-a~le.:...,..fo:_r_ro-a-.·12 Farmall Cub With Cultivators, 2~0~4~0-Po

I am look1ng lor two ferrets 11 you
are the person who bought them
lrom the Ark about one year ago
please cal l mei1 Ferrets namvs

Weadmg Gown Beauuful 1vory
sequ1ned, re embrOidered lace
SIZe 10,w1th vesl Only $225 304

550

61 0 Farm Equipment

M F ,35 Olosol 2· 135 M F 2000 &amp;75-5131
Fo.t Dlosol P.S, ·2· 3000 Forde.
Now Open Sundays 1·4 Mon Sat Wha1'1 so different about tht 3600 Ford Oleael PS Post Hole 30 A.no.u• And Ch• Angus Bulls
11 6 Ftsh Tank &amp; Pet Snap, HAPPY JACK 3X FLEA COL· D1ggors G'adtr Bladto Plows For Sale, Reasonably Priced, E•·
2413 Jackson Ave Pomt Pleas LAR? IT WORKS! AgalnatJIIU, 01rt Scoops bush Hoga, Fln11h cellent Breed1ng Slate Run
ant :114 675-2063
'''~' I mltaa w!tbeyt IYittmlc Mowers, 3 PT Rototillers, Hay Farms Jackson 740.286 5395
poltonlng R•a FEED • SUP· Teddero N H 56 H8)' - · N H
P~Y. 740 992·2164 (,._happy
liay B1nd, Bole Spear&amp;, Manure 4·H p.gs call 7.. 0·949 2017 &amp;Iter
5pm
Border Coli~&amp; Pupl)les, Ftrs1 Shots JBckinc com)
o
And wormed, Malos Oni', s 75 I&gt;;:;::::;::;::::;:::_______ Spreader M F lee, Boom Palo;
,
,.
Side Ore11er FOf Farrnalt Cub Or
Each 17&lt;0)256-11449
570 Musical
140 Pam For Ford &amp; M F K11· Chicken• many d1lferent breeds
30"-&amp;7S..192
HAPPY JACK
Instruments
selo Tractor &amp; EqUipmon~ 1 Milo
MANCIE MEDICINE
Well Holzer Hoop1tal, Jackaon Club P1gs E.cellent Bldt&gt;dl1ne,
a na,Jural blend of vegetable oils, ludwtg Drum Set, ZlldJiafl Cym· Pike Galllpolll OH, 740-446
Q,orn February' 1998, Call 740
promotes heallng &amp; hatr growth to bals Casea, 740 448 7496 A.h.at' 4 8906 740 446 7787
2•&gt;5e7Z Or 740·367·0583
hot spots &amp; se\iere manQe on P.M
25 hp 4x4 dtestl Shenmu tractor Forty cows &amp; one bull tor sale
dogs &amp; horsu WITHOUT sterWith end loader, hal blade plow, 740·368-8592
OidS R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY,
d1sc. culttvatot past hole d1gger
FARM SUPPLIES
740 992 2164 {www happy Jack.
and brush hog pooo 740·985- Good natured CharolaiS herd bull
&amp;
LIVESTOCK
1nccom)
4222 dayo or 740·985·341 2 "304-743-5969 aher 7pm

Zenuh Floor Model TV $300

Waterlme Spec1al

Pets for Sale

560

$125, 740-379·2383 Kathy

Troybllt Mod11l Horse L1ke New
$850 , Noma R1d1ng Mower 4
Wheel Steenng, 16 HP. 46• Cut,
145 Hours, $800 7110-44&amp;-.3413

«67~

Sega Saturn S~stem 2 Con
trOllers 1 Ccnuoller E~ttens1on &amp;

Pets for' Sale

-----------~ AKC
Siberian Shots
Female&amp; 9Warmed.
Weeks, aonable
Vet Checked,
WOlFF TA...INCIBEDS
Tan At Home
Buy O~rect and SAVEl
Conmerclai'Home Unna
From $199 00
low Month~ Payments
FREE Color Catalog
CaiiToOiy t 800 ZI1-Q158

eac. Tuoday through Friday, 7~0

560

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

.-~ t:u--.-mtiml • Page 07

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

•

Sunday, Apri126, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • ~oint Pleasant, WV
540

, sunday, April 26, 1998

FARM USTINGI Lo1s of land be1ng approx 430 ilcres m~ w1th road frontage galore. 3 houses
and bu•ldlngs all Included Not to ment•on 4 gas wells Cheshlfe Twp Callloday for complete
listing. 1987
$84,900 JUST MINUTES OF
CITY LOCATION! $49,DDD NEW LISTING! 14 PLUS
HOLZER HOSPITAL &amp; 35
Vinyl s1ded I slmy thai has ACRES 1hat would make a
BYPASS 4 bedroom 1 112
hv1ng room k1tchen, 2 gtea1 weekend retreat for
bedrooms ba1h &amp; laundry camp1ng or ntce place to
story ho;;,e w/large coun1ry
kitchen ltvlng room lam ly
N1ce Irani porch House has buold a new home or place a
•
h1
had upda1mg
Handy moblle home County water
and electric already In tact
room , overs1zed detac ed
locat1on 1935
garage N1ce level lawn #973
11004
$10,000.00 VACANT LAND
WOODEO 2 ACRES PLUS
ACREAGE! ApproK
approx 7 4 acres w1th pond
LOT.. a11he edge ol1own woth
country water avatlable n1ce Acres be~u1Hul flat 10 rnlii;M I
c11y wa1er lap pa1d lor Perfec1
homes11e, lencmg Coty land, mtneral
mcluded, 3 ponds, s.N&amp;;~I1
for mobile home or house
schools 1988
home s11es County water
19611
LONELY...1h1s home 1S ready avallable Hurryll971
for ommed1ate occupancy!
REDUCED PRICEI Small· lot
And owners have lowered ACREAGE WITH ROAD
Sllualed along lhe Oh1o Rtver
51
1he pnce tool Toqy 3 bedroom FRONTAGE...O vet
Ajlprox 603 acre Water &amp;
acres
2
County
water
taps
home
s1tua1ed
on
leVel
small
elec1nc ava1lable 1950
lot Open IMng room &amp; Morgan Townsh1p Qule1
d1mng area lois of cab1ne1s coun1ry sen•ng 11000
2
COMMERCIAL..Approx
1n k~chen laundry plus ideal
acres comes w1lh lh1s 28' x 52'
room for sew•ngttoy room 1 LOOKING TO BUY SOME
bulld1ng Ideally loca1ed, at SA
car
at1ached
garage RENTAI.JlNVESTMENF
160 JuSt north ol Holzer
w concrete drtve &amp; more PROPERTYI Then
Hospual Grea1 spo1 lor
one of these! 4
$46 . ~19n
produce marke1 , craft shop,
proper11es
etc , Purchase w1th or wtthout
several
e&gt;itra 100 x 400'1ol 11001

' IIUTCHI!R SHOP· Slaughter House
Old
Establishment
Bus•ness
' Celitrelly located I thll Bidwell:
Porter Area. Excellent Chance To
· Own Your Own Bullness.

, IDEAL SITE FOR APAR'niEffTS.
150 x 207 lot Is located at lhe
corner of Spruce &amp; 5th. All utllrtles
available. $19,900

EXTRA NICIE BUILDING- Or
· IIOIIILE HOllE LOT. Mature Pine
• Tr- on th&amp; three sides Access to

Raccoon

Creek Located In Hobart •
Dtllon Subd. $11,900

RACCOON
CREEK
FARMLocated on Slate Route 160 In
IIPI1hem Gallla Counly Approx 1
miles creek frontage. 30 nat lots
IIIJMiyed. Water and electnc

available. $81,000

OHIO TOWNSHIP· 82 Acres more
or lea, located in secllon 28 on
Green Ad Some tillable land but

mOstly

houle
$47,000

MEIGS COUNTY
522 MULBERRY HEIGHTS!
Comfortable 2
bedroom ranch home w1th
living room kitchen, bath and
laundry,
t
car attached
garage lois of close! space
P,aved dove 11003

$5V,BOO.OO

OHIO RIVER... 1hls property
has a great camp st1e on 1he
nver as well as a charming
very well kepi 2 bedroom
home You can enjoy 1he r~Ver
view lrom the home year
round while you entenatn all
summer long at your nver
front camp s•te Srtualed on
over 1 acre along lhe beaut•lul
Ohio R1V8r between Syracuse
and Rac1ne. Sells lor $59 900

1112
WHAT
A
LOCATION!
Located 011 Pomeroy P1ke thos
home ts close to Salisbury
Bern and Meigs HS Vinyl
sided, 1 1/2 bath, 2 bedroom
with heal pump Large 2 car
de1ached g•age &amp; paved
driveway Must 188 lhls onel
Priced al 57&amp;,000 11002

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171

RODNEY

VILLAGE
11-LAHD
3 BR ranch w1th LR,
kitchen, balh, laundry and an
dached garage Broker owned.
$48.900

CONTRACT·

IOEAL. COIIIIERCIAL LOCATION

AMERICAN
w11h 3-4
bedrooms large hvmg room,
dlmng area/lamlly room
combo Equipped k1lchen,
large deck on rear approx 2
acres. PRICE REDUCED!

et !he corner of SR 160 &amp; Vinton 51.
FON!* location ol the hvestock
- . . . Approx. 3 acree wl!h an older
2 11ory biick home. Put your Mure

bu8lr.- here

1940

.

11115

•

BIG PRICE REOUCTIQN..
COMIIERCtf

•

pasiUre and woods Old
and pond on property.

1750 STATE ROUTE 7 NORTH·
Commerc:ial S~e. NOI many lett In
this area. Approx. 5 acres flal land.
ldeal.lor almost any type biz

172 ACRES appro• road
frontage, large amount of
cleated land ancl wooded
land 1 1/2 story home ancl
mosc sheds ancl barns
tncluded 7 .Farm ponds
Approx
11 m11es from
A1hens Call lor complete
l1slvog 10114

COUNTRY! countni
LOTSI Each be1ng approx can be your 1n thla 4
SO' X 100' COmple1eW/UIIfilles, bedrooms , 2 bath hGmt
24 x 30' lrame · garage &amp; located on 131 acres mJI
Mettculoufriy maiQtaintd
attached 12'1&lt;20' shed
home. Oversized llvlnu
ACREAGE· Approx SO Acre• room formal dmlng w/Wood
Gas well on property Gooa floor Detached 2 c•r
home sites Bedford TWp garaue. pond Private
locatiOn ....
Meigs County $33,900.00

RNiaunvol

tum·key ope ..on.llulk-.
complete with building,
equipment and tnventory.
floom for e•pan!ion Can at

RACCOON CREEK PRIVACY- thts STURDY SPACIOUS 2 story
almost brand new ranch style home coloma! home • •Located In lhe
rests In over 7 acres of woods wlln .v•llage of Vinton, thia property offers
approx. 800 It of creek frontage. country Uving at a convenient prlce
Some of the many features are 4 3·4 Br. 1 112 baths, bright open
w!lh
BRs, 2 flalhs, 1B x 21 LR w/French • kllchen Wilh t 12 bslhl,
doors, 2 large treated decks, vinyl delached garage. All located high
sldtng &amp; an unattached car garage
above Raccoon .Creek. Callloday.
If you don't want to look al your
neighbors. You must th1s one • VINTON VILLAGE- 4 acres of level
land MIL w•th frontage on SR 325
,, r.f', l I:\ 1:1 11
Water &amp; electnc: available. Home
builders or 1nves1or6 all about thts
,.,, ll \ \ \ '
t,
one. 114,000

LAKi DRIVE SUIIOMSION- RIO

GRANDE-

I

Close to Univeraily· Lot
121 has water. sewer &amp; alae.

IIVIlllble. $12,000

11

1

I :1 . \ ~ ld: I t: \
I: I; t lid t:
I I to-11110:1

,,,
I

1/Ji

,,,,

i ' i:JII'\ \•

IGiUNS'f~ORE: One of SOU1hem
Ohio's largest dealers.
Established io 1968. Large
volume. Owner ralinng.
Contact Ranny Blackburn
RIVER
2.3 acres
m/1. 234 ft.
on the Ohto
River, all utilities available. Old
home on property.
SPACIOUS LIVING ABOUNDS
THIS COUNTRY CLASSIC. Htslonc
1wo story house offers 3 bedrooms,
1/2 beth, LR, DR, FL, full basement
and detached workshop. 1!nng 1n
the outdoors m the window ~ed
knchen with attache welk·tn pantry.
PriCed to steal at $74,900
SPACIOUS FAMILY HOME- This 3
BR 2 1/2 bath charmer is located
next 10 Hol~er on Lariat Drive. AI
you walk through, you'll view the
large fgrmal dining rm, LR with
stone fireplal:e, extra llwge family rm
with built In sh81vea, completely
equipped kitchen with IIUilllglrt, 15 •
17 eun rm finished ln.cadar &amp; glaae
&amp; a 2 car garage. When you lltp
out on the pallo, you'H nOIIce the
gazebo, shop &amp; another garage.
Loll of tun living here. Call for

FISHERMEN'S DREAM- Two m1les
below the dam you'll f1nd 1hts older
completely turmshed 2 BR mobile
home There's an 8 x 24 deck
overlooktng the Oh10 R1ver w1th a
storage build•ng, steps going down
to the beach '&amp; a large dock

If you believe that it's not just where you're
going In life, it's how you get there...

Get to the
National
.. Chrysler and
Plymouth Event.
.-------Chrysler Cirrus L X I - ' - - - - - ,

$17,900
HOMESITE IN THE CITY· Th1s
large level )ol js localed at lhe dead
end of Ne1l Ave. Ul~tltes available
ljome bu1lders or mvestors call
about this one. $19,900

.---Chrysler Sebring JX Convertible--~

Sl8 995·
I

. Includes '1,000 Cash.Back.
Loaded w1lh Olf condoloon1ng o multi valve V6.
Argenl olum1num wheels and a leolher-1nmmed
tntenor at no extra charge
.

COMMERCIAL LISTING- ' Rio
Grande area 1.6 acres m/1, located
on the NE corner of U S 4 lane 35
and SR 325 Lois ol potential.

S299 a month- •

I

.

36·month lease/'1.619 due at signing

(plus lox. IHie ' license).
AmertCO s favonfe convertible

A 150 horsePOWer mullo-volve englfle Mosl
1nleroor space ol onycorwerloble.

$49,900
CROWN CITY AREA- Double
Creek Road 300 acres mJ1 Level
lanll, h•llsldes Woods, pond, approx
9501J lb tobacco base, 3-'good
barns. Not mariy tracts this large

ava~able. Call - ·

~------~h~--------,

SlQ,355.

GREEN
VALLEY
ROAD ·
Everureen Atea Near Bob Evans
aau8age plan!. 3 3 acres m/1
realrtcted bU1Id1ng lot. Pond on

InclUdes suoo Cash Back.

.property. $28,500
•

Or choose 19'}10 APR.'
&lt;

'

Wilh lhe largesllnterior ol any CouPe
on lis class. Excellent fuel economy' ond
over 40quohly odvof'leemenls.

II

r - - - - - Plymouth Voyager ---~

Sl7,245.
Includes '750 Cash Back.
Lowes! P,oced m1n1von in AmeriCa' LOOded
woth features hke air cond1fioning Easy Oul Roller
Seals'- seven possenget seo11r1g and more
II~ on award w10ner.

0.

:I
•i

';

'

See your local Ch'ryJier and Plymouth Dealer.
I

I
l

'

�•

Page DB • .-..-11 an...~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea...nt, wv

contemporary Lif!ing

. ~OMPLETES COURSE - Greg Spear, a civil engineering tech·
nlc1an for the Gallla Soli and Water Conservation District (center) recently received a certificate of training completion from
NRCS State Conservationist Pat Wolfe (right) and ODNR Division
of Soil and Water Conservation Chief Larry Vance at the conclusion of the course. Spear was dne of 19 from Ohio who completed the short course last week.

Government hopes to
speed up grain trai_
ns
with better forecasting
WASHINGTON - The Agriculture Department hopes to use its ~rmy
of economists and vast network of
county offices lo curb the flarvest-

lime snarls in rail traflic by giving
railroads quicker notice of where
their trains are needed.
The "early warning" system
would combine USDA's projections
of crop production and export
demand with information to be supplied by railroads on train movements.
, " If information is power we ought
to be able to provide that up-to-date
inform':uion." Agriculture Secretary
Dun Glickman said -Monday.
Glickman and Linda Morgan.
chairman of the Surface Transportation Board. said they hoped to·have
the system working in 30 days.
Glickman and Morgan announced
their plans at a meeting with execu-

tives of Burlington Northern Santa Fe
Railway Co. and representatives of
farm and shipping int~resos in the

'

Dakotas.

Th~

rail line is -one nf the

nation's biggest haulers of agricullural commuditit!'."'.

Grain-producing area' are regularly plagued by shortages of rail cars
during heavy harvests, but the probkm was particularly acute last year
when gridlock in the Union Pacilic
sy&lt;tem rippl.!!d up the Plains and
across the Burlington Northern network. At one point. 100 million
bushels of corn were stored on the
ground at federally licensed elevators.
Economists say an efficient rail
systl!m

i!-1

By REBECCA COLLINS
GALLIPOLIS • Can you remember the last time you tgssed and
turned all night worrying about your
JOb, your relationship, your children.
your finances? It may have been last
night.
· II seems that many Americans are
plagued with worries. "What will .
happen if...my kid flunks geometry... I
don't get that prom01ion ...l don't
h~ve enough' money to pay the bills
th~s month ... my spouse disagrees
wuh me .... my parents get sick,.. ?" We
all think of the awful things that
might happen to us or to someone we
care about. Worry is just a harmless.
necessary part of life, right? Maybe
not.
What is worrying? It's actually just
daydreaming -- negative daydreaming. To worry is to imagine an
unwanted outcome to a situation.
Although worrying is a mental
process, it can affect the body. Whenever ·we worry about something. the
· body becomes tense and vulnerable.
,I Worry. stress, and dwelling on problems weaken the immune system.
leaving us more susceptible .to illness.
Worrying sometimes includes visualizing negative outcomes in our
minds. By repeating those negative

Daydre.am for:better health

images in our mind, we are more
likely to make them happen. We will
expect the Y"'fSI to occur and may
unwittingly cause it to happen. Wow,
· talk about being your own worst enemy.
When we imagine a bad situation,
the body often reacts as if it has happened. You lose energy. your mood
drops, and your performance suffers.
Do you use this kind of negative
imaging?
Anytime - you imagine
future
event, you are daydreaming. Everyone does it. In fact, children are
expert daydreamers. Gazing through
!he ~choo! ~indow, a child may
1magme wmn_mg the _Indy SOO, being
a doctor, lossmg a st1ck to a puppy.
As adults. we still daydream. Fantasizing about ~ faraway place, an
tdeal relauonshtp, or being wealthy
.are all healthy ways to temporarily
es~ape. Positive daydreams help
reheve stress. tmprove attitude, and
refresh the mind. body, and spirit.
Many Olympic athletes and successfu! busines~ .leaders use day'
dreammg w env1ston success. Using
!h1s techmque, they ·anticipate or
1ma~me Iandi ng the perfect jump,
clostng a ~al. or standing on the gold
me~al pod1um. They actually experi-

a

WASHINGTON (AP)- Dietary
supplements cannot legally claim to
do such things as "prevent cancer"
or " IQwer chole.&lt;terol, .. the government says.

Consumers bu) some $5 billion
worth of dietary supplements each

year - pills. capsules and teas that
are not approved by the Food and
Drug Administration as safe and
effective before they hit the marke!.
The question· for dietary supplements was where to draw the line.

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: &amp;l)s; low: 30s

M~i~

WASHINGTON (AP)- With the
time approaching for final decisions,
·senior Republicans are_openly quarreling over how far they can go In
penalizing the tobacco industry fqr
teen-age smoking and cigarette-related health problems.
New:ly all Democrats in Congress
are demanding the toughest possible
anti-tobacco legislat.ion. while the ·
tobacco industry has threatened to
fighi any bill it thinks harms its longterm economic interests. Many
Republicans 3(e caught in the middle.
Senate Commerce Committee
Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz., the
author of a $.516. billion package of
taxes and regulatory measures that is
heading to the Senate floor. said Sunday that something close to his bill
will eventually pass for reasons both
patriOiic and "a little crass."
"There's a lot of money that is

· Local Owner. extra Clean · ·

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going to be spent there, and politicians are very attached to that," he
said on NilC's ."Meetthe Press."
But Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, the
chairman of the Judiciary Committee,
said on NBC that McCain would fail
because his bill is too punitive a,nd
"you'll have bankruptcy, you'll have
black market, you'll have something
thai doesn' I work."
---...::::
Hatch. who last week caned
McCain's legislation "pitiful." .has
his own $398 billion package that is
closer to' the $368 billion settlement
reached last June between the tobacco industry, state attorneys general
and public health advocates.
McCain shot back that "there is
not five votes for what SenatQr Hatch
just asked for, and that was to ~o easier on the tobacco companies. •
McCain's bill. which was
approved by the Commerce Com-

not determined what his role should
ATHENS.(AP)- The Rev. Jesse be.
.
.
.
Jackson says it is time for the people
However, "More and more Amerof Appalachia to mQbilize to improve •
icans
are being left behind. That must
health care, education and wages.
be
the
essence of the debate in '98'
But whether he will lead them by
seeking the' Democratic presidential and 2000," he said.
Jackson repeated that message at
nomination in 2000 .remains to be
.
a
breakfast
today with student leadS«n.
ers
at
the
school.
He told about '70
"I have not m!lde that decision, in
• paorbeo:au...it I&amp;~ Jailkson st~nJs that the gap .be!ween rich
said Sunday night following a town and pcior is larger tllan the one
hall nicctins he mOderated at Ohio between bla~ks and whites.
University on the growing gap • He said a bus tour of the area he
planned later today would focus on
between the rich and poor.
Jackson's two-day visit to this city -"real ~s of real people."
During the town hall meeting. he
of 21,000 residenL• about 60 miles
listened
to a panel of specialists on
southea•t of Columbus ha.• been
labeled a• an attempt to gauge his education, medicine, the environappeal for a possible presidential bid ment. business and welfare talk about
the problems of the area.
for 2000.
·
'
Athens County's unemployment
After the town hall meeting, Jacktate
was 1.6 percentage points above
son told reporters he is committed to
doing his part to closing the , gap the 'slate average ·of 5.9 percent in
. between the rich and poor. but he has March. The county!s per-capita

. OR GET

One owner, low miles, leather, loaded.
We Sold It New

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for 1 1·cnr.

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UNITED STATES

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One mature owner. 25,000 actual miles, T-tops, garage kept,
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new ~reinium tires, like new

899
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Th1 way p1ople
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ral~

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'
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'""'"'e
~.morltht Olt8"
J""' ll·month Wf\'l(f iKJfffmtl'lt ftO.liTII"!) dl.ln)P\, f.lxn. !dis ,1nd n.-lwUil kH th.mJt'~ ~~ lttefull.-tl O.l~t~

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lt'\ltf.tltl'lr.

.
,1mi•I~II!Jt\ 111.1~ •'fiPIV ~· \t(Jitt fOt tkl~'-

Hellttl rllklllld how to aller
lifestyles to • - the chanc:ft
of developing hUrt dl-se .
were the emph•l• of the ninth
annual hellth fair conduclld
by tile NurslngAaalatllnt a... ·
of Melp High School last
-IL Studlntl, tlacheq and
others In attendance - • ·
olfered acrlenlngs lor liloocl
clio'-'tllrol, blood preeaure,
blood sugar and hemoglobin,
along wllll nutrition counMIIng. They _ . shown how
emoklllll effKta the body, J*"'
tk:lpat8d lri demOneblllcwla on ·
the Heimlich Maneuver, played

a Jllllll to.dellrmlne COI'Onery
rlek, got·l CCIIIIIIUterlnd . .

98 FORD CONTOUR · .

'

ARM PAINTING - Face painting, or arm
painting as shown here, Is popular with youngsters attending aree feetlvals. Alicia Sinclair, 6,

got a pink bunny painted on her arm by Rhoda Hay, who bills herself as a "fancy face
painter."

Mounting
charges ·
irk ·users

income in 1994 wa• $7,367 below the
state average qf $20,867.
"I think people in this region
struggle everyday," said Russell Tippelt, a panelist and a dean at Hocking College ·in nearby Nelsonville.
People who once worked in the
region- which used to be dominatCOLUMBUS (AP)·- Telephone
ed by the ccial-mining industry bi lis these days have even the
·liOW stltlt-for jobs that Ofleli 'j)ay"S6
lelecommunicutions e~pfK!\~11- .
per hour or less, said Jack ~rech, mg thetr heads.
·
.,
another panelist and director of the
Thet"e are local. long-distance and
county's D&lt;!partinent of Huroan Ser- access charges. along with' state and
vices.
.
federal taxes. A new 35-cent charge
Appalachia. like other pans of the now appears for each long-distance
country, has been left behind a.• the call m¢e from a pay phone when a
stock market continues to soar, Jack- calling card is U!jCd.
son said.
As lelecommunicntions competi"1 am convinced Appalachia is the lion 6pands, the growing number of
place; to raise this moral question," he charges and services appearing on·
said.
.
.
residential telephone bills is making
.The cla.~s gap was one a~pecl of it more difficult to understand them.
Jackson's presi~ntial campaigns in ,
The mounting charges are making
1984 and 1988.
the phones ring at tile Ohio Consumers' Counsel. the slate's watchdog agency for residential utility
customers.
"These bills are so hard to read.
They're too complicated." Vicki
Leach-Payne, head of consumer com'
. FLOWER FESTIVAL QUEEN- Hilllary Turley; left, daughter of
plaints and compliance for the
Larry and Linda Turley of Racine, was crowned 1998 Racine ·
agency, told The Columbus Dispatch
Flower Festival queen at Saturday's las!ivalln Star Mill Park. She
for a story Sunday.
Is shown here being crowned by last year's queen, 'Melisse Car-·
"They're full of language and
mail. Other candidates were Trlsh Holman, Cynthia Caldwell, All· •
phra.•ing that makes no sense. Even
cia
Mulford and 'Jtiyme Miller.
if you're looking carefully to catch
something, it's hard to detect."
Telephone charges fall into three
basic categories: '
· ·
• Local phone service. provided by
Ameritech Ohio and other companies, including option&amp;! services such
Pleasant spring weather and plenty nf entertainment &lt;"ontributed to cnna~ voice mail. Caller ID and call waitsidemble
crowds at the Racine Flowet Festi~al held Saturday at Star Mill
ing.
Park.
The
annual event is sponsored by the Radne Area Commuoity Orga• l..ongcdistance charges by AT&amp;T.
nization.
MCI. Sprint and !)!her c~rriers.
Parade winners were. in order. the Lester Manuel family. Harts' Countcy
• State and feder-dl taxes and manKitchen.
and Dave and Dormhy Sayre .
. dated charges.
Hilliaty
Turley. daughter of Larry and Linda Turley _of Ritdne. was One charge approved by the Fedcrowned
199X
Flower Festival Queen. Other candidates were Trish Holman,
eral Communications Commission is
Cynthia Caldwell. Alicia Mulford and Jay me Miller.
a $3.50 monthly fee for one line RACO President Kathryn Hart said the park was busy all day long.
$8.50 for two - to reimburse long"It
was one of the best days we've ever had for the !lower festival," she
distance companies for charges
said.
·
·
.
·
·
• assessed by I()Cal companies for
I
begionin~ . and ending long·distailce
calls. ' .
·
Long-distance carriers · recently
added on ano.lher 95-cenl charge.
That means residential customers
with·two ]lllone lines now pay $9.45
Today's
each month in access charges.
I Section. 10 Pages
. "Cramming" is the latest new
Vol. 4'1, No. ti
problem for consumers. Siinilar to
"slamming" - when customers·
WASHINGTON lAP) - Fonylong-distance service is switched eight percent of female inmates and
Classifieds
without their permission - cram- 13 percent of jailed men have been
omics
ming occun ,.vhen telecommunica- . abused sexually or physically at least
lions services or charges are tacked once in their lives. according to a proonto bills withou.t customer approval. · file of the nation's local jail inmates
",We're setting a lot more com- released Sunday.
plaints, probably 25 percent more,"
More than a quarter of the women
Ms. Leach-Payne said. " ... For - 27 percent - and 3 percent ol
example, a lot of people are being men said the abuse included rape.
Lotteries
charged for voice mail from other Large numbers of the inmates grew
companies when they dian 't order up in single-parent homes. were chilOHIO
i!."
. diDo-of dissolute parents or spent at
Sl!per Lotto: 6-8-9-38-40-41
!fer advice? Examine those bills lea~l part of their childhood in homes
Pick 3: 6-9-9; Pick 4: f-4-3-6
closely each month.
on welfare or in public housing. More - Kicker: 4-0-0-0-9-6
Ameritech, the state's largest tete- than a third - 36 percent - said
ens Mamorltll Holpllwl and the
W.VA.
tJI!onc
company, includes services they were unemploy.-d before their
...,... COUnty Haallll DepertDaily 3: 7-3-5; Oaily 4: 2-4-2-7 .
billed by other companies on · cus- most recent arrest.
ment. (PIIotoe by Charlene
0 1998 Ohio Valley PublithinJ Co
Hoelllclll
. .
tomer bills.
.

Racine Flower Festival
draws crowd Saturday \

90 HONDA ACCORD EX

Come ;,, rwd get 300 ,,;·,tilt'.' )'Clll Ctlll , _,c ilrfrtimc.
Otfi·r fll'nilnbh Tlwr~dn)' tllfollgh ,\ loudnr o"/J'.

•

.---Health fair stage~-___,

PLUS:
Get 11 select lrnud-lu.:ld J'hour, lcntha
· cnrrj•iug· cnsc, cigarette lighter ndnvtrr
aud 30 lowlmiumc:s for just lft.9;.

Single Copy- 35 Cents

mittee on a 19-1 vote,' was crafted
after the White House and public
health organizations said the June
deal, which gives the industry some
immunity from future. lawsuits. was
too lenient. But the industry maintains that McCain's legislation would
drive them out of business, and it has
threatened to fight such provisions as
limits on advertising.
Sen. John Chafee of Rhode Island,
w.ho has proposed his own tough antitobacco bill, urged his fellow Republicans to be civil and work together.
"Auacking each other or making this
a partisan battle just lakes Congress'
eye off the anti-tobacco ball," he said
in a statement to The Associated
Press.
Chafee said he was spearheading
an effort to get Senate Majority
Leader-Trent Loll, R-Miss., to keep
his promise to bring the McCain bill
to the floor before the end of May.

Jackson looking to·~lo_se gap
between rich, poor with visit

Fully lciaded. low miles, cass, PW, push button 4-wheel drive,
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: 1·888 446-2684
216 Upper Riv.er Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio

-

--GOP leadership argues
over tobacco leg~·slation

97 JIMMY SlE

446-2404
1

Hon,etown Newspaper

County's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

$~ASH
OHIO VALLIY CHECK
CASHING &amp; LOAN

Labonte wins
DieHard 500
Page 4

•·

NEED CASH TILl PAYDAY?
•

110 HASSLE, 110 CREDIT CHECK .

Forget about Big Brother, Page. 2
Bulls hand Nets defeat, page 5
Won't change his ways, Page 10

Today: Partly sunny
High: 50s; Low: 30s

ence .winning. This dim:tly affects Really allow yourself to be there.
mood,-performance, and energy levSee yourself doing whatever it is
el."
you want to accomplish. Perhaps you
Worrying llecomplishes the same see yourself briskly walking for exerthing except .it imprint.s negative cise and eating only healt~y foods.
images rather thlin positive ones. By Maybe you're laughing and enjoying
thin~ing about all of the awful things
an evening with friends. You may
that could happen, you are "practic- visualize emotional control. master. ing" that event.
ing a tough project. or easily recovNegative thoughts can be replaced ering from surgery.
with positive ones with a little pracYou can also daydream al)out
tice. The next time you daydream. playing. relaxing, and having fun.
make those dreams work for you, not Not all of your images have to
against you. Try the following tips to include accomplishing a goal. Create
get you staned. Fin::, relax, get com- a healthy balance for your life. Use
fortable. Listen to calming music if positive imaging -to help manage
you w1_sh. Stretch your body. Close stre s~. work through a tough issue. or
your eyes. Take long. slow, deep escape the everyday pace of life.
breaths, allow your body to relax. Allow daydreams to have a positive
Focus on your breathing. the music,
influence on your life.how.comfortable you feel.
·.
Rebecca Collins iS Gallia CounTake a mental trip to a favorite or
imagined place. See the colors. feel ty's Agent in family and consum~r
the breeze. smell the fragrances. sciences.

Sports

Aprll27,

Weather

FDA re·s tricts clai·ms
of dietary supplements.

more important than evc:r

because farmers are relying more on
foreign sales rather than government
support for their income.
"The key for the railroad• is to
know where the supply and the
demand js going to be. That's not
always happened in the past, .. Morgan said.

Sunday, Aprll26, 1998.

111111 of thtlr Ide aiiJI8CIIOCY,

.... aamplld hllf1.hllllh food.

ClrlluMh,a~

In photO above, 11
·by
Kylillmlddll to demoroebalw
' hoW the llelmflalllll IIU- Ia
uead to I 1st IOIMOIII'who Ia
cfloldng.ln"' top pholo, . . .
fanl 81ar1'11 taltd two ~u­
dantl, ._IIM!IIthl Marshllll, , TIICfllr of till Clue Ia Margie
Ceiillr, and . .... lea Po_.l, 1111101, R.N. Aaalatlng wlttl the
" ............ to llalp . . . . hlllttl fllr ·..,. nuraee from
. mine ~ltMtlr c:oron&amp;rJ rl.._ Holnr Medlcel Cenllr, Yater-

Report cites Good Afternoon
-inmate abuse.---------.
· "I s
Sentine
by Ioca I Jal

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